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;o.-1'1'18 Dilly Sentinel

: Plgl

'llllldiY, November 28, 1tM

Ponwoy-Middi..,Grt,
Ohio
.
-

'

Emergency HEAP and regular HEAP continue
Beat 'of the Bend ...

·

by Bob Hoeflich

Beaaoflbe Beod
Tile4 ollulkey? Me, 1110. How·
·ever, DilDY of you remember lbe
old sayiug, "Waste DOt, want DOt"
so we've got to bang in lillie. 1bat
bird cu'tlast fcnver. Can It?
'

Mrs. Stella Altius bas been
retumed to her bome io lbe Har·
rlaonvllle area and abe wanta to
tbank yoo for tbe lovely cards aod
'prayers. Sbe baa been c:ouflncd to
,tbe Holzer Medical Center for tbe
past mootb rctuperatlna from a
brotenbip.

--

Dec:ember Ia roUIDg rigbt In OD
us and I wanted to rculiDd you that
tbc Rutland Emergeocy Medical
Servicel will be balding Ita 8IIIIUIIl
Cbrislmaa bazaar from 9 a.m. to s
:p.m. tbla Sallllday, Dec:. 3.
There will be all sorta of craft
people oo band wltb tbeif wares. If
·you w111t to be amoog 'em. 0011tact
,Marsha Elliott at 742-2233 or
JoaDD Eads at 742-3078. You get
· 'im eight foot apue for $10. The
'.bazaar will feature also refreab:tnenta, door prizes and C.J. and tbe
Country Geotlemen will be on
band to CDtertaiD you from 2 to 4
·p.m.

' Gcnla1 Bob and Hazel DucldiDg

:_wUI be holding a holiday season
opco bouse for tbcir family and
frleDda at tbe1r borne, 60.5 Sixtb St.
in RaciDC from 7 to 9 p.m. 1111 Sat'IUday, Dec. 10.
All 11 rooms of the Dudding
home ~ dec:orated exteosively far
lhe seasoo as are tbe porches of
tbeir resideDce. So please make a
.POle of tbat 8Dd drop by for a visit
-witb Bob and HazeL 'lbal's really a
Dice tblng lbey're doing.

• Chuck and Daisy Blakeslee of
-J.jucoln Heights, Pomeroy, really

·have spent tbelr retiremellt "oo tbe
road''. WeD, OD tbc road. the water
and io tbe air, you migbt say io
Jravellng. They've oow visiled five

CODiilleDta.
They·recently returned home
from a IS-day cruise tour which
toot tbem to Arrica. Among tbe
~~Dints of interest they visited was
Casablanca. I wonder if Sam is still
playing • As Time Goes By". On
Ibis trip, Chuck and Daisy eveo
lOde a camel ride. Note tbat I didn't
say they "enjoyed" a camel ride.
I'm not sure about that.
Not soooer getting home pracU·
cally tbat tbe Blateslees took off
for Wichita, Kansas, to spend
'lbantsgivlng witb tbeir daughter,
Palricia Circle, and their grandchildren, Mark Circle, and Mary ADD
Circle Ham.

both tbe inaime guidelineS uid the

The applitation period for botb
Emergency and Resular HEAP
programs coDtinues far the 1994-95
heating season. Botb programs
offer ODe-time &amp;Ssistaoce per beat·
ing season to income eligible
households.
Emergency HEAP is a crisis
intervention program desigoed to
relieve beat· related emergencies for
households experiencing disconnection, tbreat of disconnect.ioo, or
bulk fuel tbat will last oo longer
tban I0 days.
Regular HEAP is additional
beating assislaDce available to lowincome Ohioans. Assistance in
completing tbese applications cao
also be provided by HEAP staff at
tbe Community Action Cheshire
office andJor Outreach offices in
Gallia and Meigs County.
To be eligible for tbe program.

emergency requirement must be
met. Household income is defined
as gross income of all household
members, except eaDed iDcome of
dependent minors 18 years of age.
Allowable annual income for a
one person household is
$11,040.00,
two
persons
$14,760.00, tbree persons
S18,480.00, four persons
$22,200.00,
five
persons
$25,920.00,
six
persons
$29,640.00, and add $3,720.00 for
each IDdividual member.
Applications are also available
for tbe Regular HEAP proRram
which is additional beating assistance of a non-emergency nature.
The income guidelines are the same
for botb programs. The deadline for
Regular HEAP applications is
March 31, 1995.

Thought you might want to
mow about Dorotba-we lllways
calicd her Dorothy- Winebrenner
NeuiZling.
Her birtbday is coming up oo
December 7, Pearl Harbor Day,
and she williiiXids your boost She
is currently residiug at Darst's Pri·
vate Care Home, 33164 Cbildreo's
Home Road, Pomeroy, and cards
will reach ber there.
Dorotby was a resident of LiDcolD Hill for oearly SO years. She
and bcr husband, Richard, were
married Jm. 24, 1942. and Dorotby
was. tbc oWDcr-operato' of Neut·
21inf I Belllty Sbql. above the BCD
Franklin Store in Pomeroy, from
tbe 1940's uotU the mid 1970's.
She also worked as a senior frieud
serving as a driver for tbe Meigs
County Senia Qtizcus Ccula'.
The Neutzllng home wbicb she
and Richard built in 1952 haS been
sold to Randall and Cindy Russell
and tbeir two small daughters.
Please be sure to let Dorotby
bear from you. She oeeds to mow
tbat she has friends out there and
they do care.

---

"'

IJJeclal.

only bothers you wben tbe wind
blows so MODday must bave been a
disaster. Do keep smiling.

Page4 .

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Buckeye 5:

.

5-12-17-18-33

•

en tine

Sorority dinner planned
A CbrisbDas dinner '9 be held at
tbe Holiday Inn on Dec. 6 at 6:30 ·
p.m. was planned wheo Xi Gamma
Mu chapter of Beat Sigma Pbl
Sorority met recently at tbe Red
Rosoter Restaurant In Gallipolis.
At tbe Christmas dinner a gift
exchange wiU be held witb secret
sisr«s to be revealed at tbat time.
Presents are 10 be wrapped In wbite
paper witb red bows.

· All Ta~ning
Lotions

- ·sheila Harris presided at the
meeting which was followed by ao
evening at tbe movies.
At an earlier meeting held at the
Bradbury Church of Christ, a do
your own tiling auction was held
with Mrs. Harris as auctioneer.
Members were reminded by Kay
Atkins, service chairman, to bring
items to be distributed to Serenity.
House to tbe next meeting.

Vol. 46, NO. 147
Copyrteht 1994

1/2 Price

Following tbe potluck the outAs a ldctoff to boliday obser- side CbrisbDas tree will be lighled
vances at tbe Center, a potluck sup- as a memorial to deceased mem·per and ellliil'lalmiieot will be beld bers and friend&amp;. There win be
tbere Friday. The supper wlll be Chris~ music aud singing, and
served at 4:30 p.m. al)d those tbe Big Bend Cloggers will present
auending are inviled to tate a cov- a Christmas program at 6:30p.m.
ered dish. Table service, meat and The public is invited to_atteod.
beverage will be fumisbed.

f•Z

T~i
. Pomtroy, OH 46768

200 West SeeoJICI Street
992-6255

·•

2 Sectiona, 14 P~ 35 centa
A MUIIImeclll Inc. Newl~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 30, 1994

GATT backers turn attention to Senate
WASHINGI'ON (AP)- Witb House approval of a sweeping 124lllllioo trade accord behind It, the Clinton admiolstratlon Ia tumlng its
auentiOD to shoring up support for the pact in tbc Senate: ·
The Hoose coocliided Tour bours of sometimes llllpasslooed. sometimes .perlillctory debate Tuesday by ratifying, 288-146, a vast expansion
oftbe Genenl Agreement OD Taritls and Trade.
"'Ibis vote dcmoilslratea Ill tbc Americali people tbat Democrats and
Republl!:aJII cu wodc togetber in the national interest," PresideD! CliniOO
said lo a statement lmmedi•tely afterward.
Favoring tbe accord were 167 Democrats I!Dd 121 Republic;ans.
Elgbty·Dilic DemoaBta, 56 RepuWC8111 and 11DC iDdepclldcot oppoiCII it
'

.

- ~·-~-

.. ~ ..

.

.

The margil) or viCtory I'C{!I'CSCDted a victory for Clinton. wbo had
worked the telephones tbrougbOut tbc day talldDg 10 mdtcided lawmakers. and it was the tint posHiectiCJD test of whether the Wbite House and
Republicans wbo will CODtrol Capiftll Hill in January Clll ooopc:mc.
''The eyes of tbe w«1d II'C oow 1111 lbe UDited Slates Senate,'· CliniOO
declared.
Continuing the first lame-duct session of Coogress in 12 years, tbe
Senate was beginnin&amp; a scbeduled 20 hours ol debate todAy, witb a vote
set for Thursday.
Senate Republican leader Bob Dole, wbo aDDOUDced his support last
week~ said r.:om Brussels, Bell!ium. that be believed the Senate would

Cr1sp gets temporary
confinement at home

Gift Certificates Available ·

ooce the seasoo is passed. tbe orna- Heights. Pomeroy.

• The C11181DeDII cost $S each and

may go to the Outreach office lo
tbe1r county.
The telephone number for tbe ·
. Cheshire office is 367-734I~r
Gallia county and 992-6620 or :n..•
6629 ror ·Meigs couoty. The Ga1lia
county Outreach office telephone
number Ia 388-8232 and tbe Meigs
county outreach number is 9925605. The toll·free bodine number
for inquires on Regular H~AP
applicatioos is J.80().282.o880.

..--.::·

SHOW palm spathe
witb
mums won reserve best of show ID artbtlc
arrangements ror Melanie S.tethem at the weekend's Christmas
Dower show held at Carleton SchooL
·

Pick 3:
876
Pick4:
7568

Williams
All-Ohio

· office oo Fridays, but applicaota

Tann.ing $2 0
.1 5 Sess1ons
.
'3 .0. ·Sess1ons
Tann.ing $3·0

1 mow. 'lbal bole In your bead

ment will be given to tbe purchaser
as a teepsate of tbe recogDitillll.
·· ·All ptocceda from tbe ptoject
will be used iD tbe bome delivered
meal program. Donations can be
made at !be Center or handled by
mail to Box 722, Mulberry

~ Meigs'

it

proceeds from project will go toward meal·program
: WoodeD stocking ornaments
·wm be used to decorate the "Tree
;,f Ugbts" at tbe Meigs Multipuriloae 'Senior Ceoter tbls yeat and
'lesldents are encouraged to place
:u omament oo tbc tree in memory
J1f a loved ooe or to booor IOIDCODC

Applicalions for .botb programs
cao be made at the Gallia County
Outrench office, 863 Porter Rd.,
Porter, Monday tbru Friday from
9:00 tol2:00 aod 1:00 tbru 3:3~
The Meigs Outreadl offu:e, 3935\'
Union Ave., Pomeroy accepts ,
applications Mooday tbrougb fri.
day from 9:00 to12:00 and 1:00 to
3:30. The Cbesbire office hours are
9:30 to 12:00 and 1:00 to 3:30,
Monday tbru Thursday. No appli·
cations are tateo at tbe Cheshire

Ohio Lottery

Jack Crisp, the former director
of the LeadiDI Creek COIISCI'VIIICY
Dislrict. must stay In au Ohio llllne
uodl antborldes cao find a prison
tbat will bouae him, visiting Mor·
gao Cou!ltY Iudge Dan Favreau
~ Tuesday ID Meigs County
CdimDCJD Pleas Court.
Also, tbe $50,000 caab bond
polll:cl against Crisp was daopped,
to be replaced by a $50,000 person·
·al rec:ognl7lii!C'A: bond, Faweau said.
lo February, Crisp was seotenc:ed to 18 DIODiha in jill for five
misdemeanor counts of reteivlng
impoper compenaatloo for bonuses. Due to hia healtb, Crisp had not
begun bia jaU tenD. Crisp, 63, has
lived In Bayd County, Ky.
· "The prosecutor is mating
llllaDgemeots becanse of bia medical condltiOD," Favreau said. The
new prosecuting attoroey iD tbe S·
· year-case Is Meigs County ~
cutor
Leotes.

pass the deal iD a cloSe VOle. .
Treasury Secretary Lloyd BCIIISCD and tbe pro-GATI floor leaders iD
tbc Senate -Daniel Pattick Moyoihan of New Ycrt and Bob Packwood
of Oregoo - were scheduled to addreas a rally today of business executives preparin~ a last-minute lobbying push for the aa:mL
The executives 8l:d administralioo coolend GATI will creaae hundreds
of tbousands of new American jobs by cullil)a worldwide lariffs by 38
perceot and expanding the rules of world ti'ade to new areas such as apiculture and services.
Opponents claim it woul!l pmllit multinatiooal corporate giauta Ill shift
productioo to low-wage counlries overseas aud ship tbelr goods bact to
the lucralive Amerie111 ~

criminal cases in a county theD tbat
attorney canoot act as special Pros·
ecuta, Lentes said. Toy had served
as special prosecutor io Ibis case
since January 1990, taking over for
Fred W. Crow Ill, the current
Meigs commoo pleas judge.
Crisp must stay witb ~ family
member aud cannot leave tbe bane
except for a medical emergency,
Favreau said. Wbea Crisp leaves
the home he must cootact autborl·
ties.

Crisp will tem~y stay in a
bote! outside Me1gs County while
more permaDCnt arrangements are
made at a family member's home
to allow for bis bed and supply
oeeds, Leotes said.
Recent court files by Crisp's
doctors noted thai Crisp's CODdinoo
remains serious. Crisp hassuffered
heart attacks, narrowing of ~
arteries aud a complete OCGiusion
of tbe right coronary artery oo
.JAIICl~~~ whldl he h~d angloplas~ .~t·
11!!-liib~!~•
~~ dQde&amp; ment. according Ill doaoh. ..
.
6ii:lle'· ·-f'"a'ncw oplillcib
Crisp's attorn~r.. William
&amp;aiD l'lllle•C(qt:i The order cledd- Eachus. has claimed If Crisp .were
ed .thlllf an alllln1cy has bandied--- _.(Contllllled 08 Page 3) '

f.,

••CIIIIell

s.uspects in robbery,
rap~- given probation
PRI
U.~.U.A.

ECKRICH . $119
BOLOGNA
.

LB.

lHUilt

KRAFT

YELLOW 59c
ONIONS

BONELESS BEEF

CHUCK ROAST
$119 LB. .

PARKAY

MARGARINE

3# .BAG ..

CARNATION

r---------------------,
COUPON
GOLD MEDAL FLOUR BErn CROCKER CAV.E MIXES BOUNTY PAPER .
I
TOWELS
BUY ONE GET ONE I " BUY ONE GET ONE
.~OLL
Umlt 1
COUPON

BROWN BERRY

STUFFING
BUY ONE GET ONE

1.1~l2

COUPON

FREE
FREE
FREE ~m:
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1--··-·-··..;;;,;;.•• .;;:__
.

.J

I

'

\

p0 -w ELL'S
I•

.

I

..

&lt;I

··SALi P..CES CiOOD WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 30TH ONLY • NO RAIN CHECKS
I

"'

-·

..
--·

-r

LB.

MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND COFFEE

~-~--·~--=-·----··-·---· LK~
$1 12 .oz.
COUPON

39c

.

39c

L---------------------~

STORE HOURS
MONDAYTHRUSUNDAY
BAM ·10 PM
298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY
'

"

B:r GEORGE ABATE
aad JIM ftEEMAN
Seutloel News Slalf
· Two Meigs County men who
pleadecl guilty last moolb to felony
. cliarg~s - but not the iJ!itia1
charges of rapiDg ~d robbmg a
Syracuse WOIII8D llsl May - were
sentenced to five years probatioo
Tuesday.
Timothy "Bo" Willis of SyraCU$e and David SiP.J,aD 9f Portland
bad a six-moo.th Jail sentence for
felony obstrucling jusliee suspended to probation, visiting Morgan
County JudJe Dan Favreau

ordered.
''
Both must pay $1,000 to the
Meigs County Trust Fund and
auend six months of counseling. ·
The pair were earlier charged
along with Middleport's Bengy
Rhoades of taking a Syracuse
woman from the Old Uberty Bar in
Pomeroy to a secluded location on
the Flood Road near Pomeroy. She
then was allegedly gang-raped and
abandoned.
Earlier this year, Rhoades pleaded guilty 10 charges of gross sexual
imposition and tlieft and is serving
(Continued 08 Page 3)

BIG BUCKS - Larr bucks were harvelhd , _ acrou the
county during tb• Orst two days or tbls year'• deer/gun MUOn.
.Alfred's John White, above at left, shot his lint back ever, at 10..

Authorities: shooting deaths appear to be self-inflicted
Two receot uorelated aboodog
deaths in Meigs County were
apparently lbe result of self·iDfllcted gunshot womds, officials lellla·
lively determiocd.
The body of Ivan Halliday, 57,
~f StroDgs Run Road. Deal Salem

Isolation didn't suit
Dahmer, lawyer says
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - As
iovestlgators worked to answer
qiiCIIiODS surrouodiDg tbc .death ol
_J.cfl'my Dahmer. bia la!ll')'er said lbe
serial tiller dldo't want tbc JCSUictive 'liviDI conditions that could
bave saved him.
"He waoted to be in with the
general (prlion) population. He
tlldo't WIBlt to sit in a hole Ill day
Ioog," Stephen J. Eisenberg said
....
rueDahmer,
-Y·
a native of Ohio. was
found In a pool of blood iD a gym•
oaaium bathroom .be bad been
cleaning early Moaday at
Columbia Correctiooallostitutioo
in Portase. Preliminary 11utopsy
results showed he died of multiple
atu11 fraclures and braiD lnU1D8.
AD iDIDale wbo had been dean·
ing anotbcr nearby bathroom when
attacked remained In critical CODdi·
tiOD wltb head lnlurlea at UDiverslty Hospital late Tueaday oight.
A lblrd prlSOIIer who had bCeD
working ·with tbe two men on a
cle!IJIDg c1eta11 was ideodfied as the
IUSpecl iD tbc slaylug. ComctiODs
Seaellly Micbacl Sullivan said tbe
tblee were tbe oDiy iomates In tbe
IYDI • tbc time of tbq aaack. '
A bloody broom handle was
foaDd oear Dahmer, but authorities
haclo't determined if It was the
m.ner weapoo.
Thlt - ODC of many questioDI
·unanawmd u IDveatlgllorl from
tbc state Justice Deparllllent and
Columbia County ShCriff"a ~meat eean:bed tbc prison ~.

conducted interviews 8Dd reviewed
the crime scene Tuesday.
Sullivao wouldn't specify where
were at tbat time,
twO gmudnlld a
officer were in tbe
area.
said one of the
guards had left tbe gym for a time
to bring iD inmates for workouts.
DaluDer. arrested at bia Milwaukee apartmeot in July 1991, coofessed to tilling 17 men and boys
.
ha
over 13 years and IOIDeliDles vlog sex wltb and C81111ibalizlng the
corpses.
He was the larget of au attack iD
prison last July, wben an inmate
tried to cut his throat, but the
weapon, a razor blade auacbed to .a
plastic handle, fell apart before 1t .
could burt Dahmer.
Dahmer bad bceD kept in isola·
lion at the prison for a year befcn
tbc staff cletenDined )1e could mix
. witb otber pr1soDm. Sullivan said.
Eisenberg said he aud Dahmer
. never disCUSsed his living anange· meats and he dido't mow whether
Da1uner could bave requested men •
Secure quartaa1
But If Dallmer had wanted to be
in isolalioo, the lawyer said. "!'m
sure it would bave been very SUD·
pie to obtain !bat -just commit
some prisOD violaliODS."
The Rev. Roy Ratcliff, who
baptized Dahmer In Malin a
prison iDfinnary whlrlpoo bath,
said Dabmer hid told him he p
erally gotlllon1 well wltb other
lomaw.

Center, was found Tuesday around
1:25 p.m. in a bam in Salem Tnwn-

sbip, assislaDt prosecuting attomey
Chris Tenoglia said tbla m9111iDg.
Teooglia said the body'was sent
to tbe Franklin Countv Corooer' •

Office for a~topsy. The incideoi
remains under investigation, be
said.
Meanwhile, Sheriff James M.
Soulsby said this morning tbe Nov.
23 sbootiDg death of a Langsville
man was likely self-inflicled, per-

Thomas MOCR, 31, Stalie Route
124, was shot in the head shortly
before II p.m. in his home, report1
stated.
Soulsby said the Moore shoot,
lng remains under investigatiOD.

Middleport
hristmas kettles out--- parade
set
for Thursday

The brlaht reel kettles fJI the Salvatloa Army art out and volupteers are ringinJ! their bells to .
encourage coutrlbutlou to the Anly's annual Christmas jlrojed of rememberiDg the uofortu •
nate. This year the kettles are at Powell's Super Valu, Fnodland and Pamlda. Pictured is Carol
Slltllllan, a YUioteer It tile Pvweli's Jocadoo, The moaey collected between now aod Christmas
will be ued to buy food for the more tbu 100 ballets to be prepll'ed ror families iD aeed, and to
buy tOJS for Ulldrea w1ao •IPt oot otl1enrise receive uy. Families may register to be remembered from 10 IJI!.-110011 od 1-4 PJL OD
aod 7 at tbe Salvation Army beadquaners, Butternut Aveoue, Potaero,. (Seadllel pboto lly Cllarleue H~h)

nee. '

"

r·

haps accidentally.

Only 24 shopping days uotil
CbrisbDas. Are yoo n:ady?
· To get you in a more festivemood, Middleport win bold its
annual CbrisbDas.parade bel!inning
at 6 p.m. Thursday.
Anyone inleresled in participallng should go 10 the llaiJr, Queen.
where tbe procession wdl form,
said Tom Dooley. Middleport
CoDUDunity Associatioo presidcllt.
The parade will bead soutb oo
North Seco~;~d Avenue, mate a
right !Urn .at tbe at the •r• onto
Mill, continue on S.outh Third
A venue to Main Street, ium left
onto Main Streei and tbeo bact
onto South Second Avenue. The
parade will end in tbc Dave Diles
Park area. said Dooley. who will
coordinale !be parade.
Area parents may get a free~
tograph ol their cbildren witb SIDII
Claus at Peoples Bank. The Big
Bend Cloggers will perform in tbe
bank's p;utlng lot after tbe parade.
Participating Middleport businesses will remain open until 8
p.m. for sboppe!S tbat evening•.The
town's mercbauts bave done an
excellem job in coordinating tbia
year's gift give-away, Dooley
added.

A lotal ol36 businesses ue t:;·
ticipating in the weekly JW11 1•~ .
People may register elcb weet fJI
tbc five weeks and every 'l'bunday
tbe winnera will be 8I!IIOIJI1Ced ·

(Contlnlied ....... 3)

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Comntentar
Dally Sentinel

Ohio

•'

,,

Terrorism unde,rgoes an · ominous rebirth
- -·-- --The usual suspects ue still
around, and just u nuty u ever.
States that sliD sponsor terrorism
include Syria (which Clinton
recently placatcd with a state visit),
lran,lnlq, Ubya and Sudan.
Whlle these traditional threats
continue to keep the West on
guard, several newer tlueats have.
also emc:lged that are Yi'lllrilane 10
counter-tarorism officials:
- Islam has long been split into
two main sccts, Sunol and Shiite.
Sunni Muslims rule most Arab
countries. such as Saudi Arabia,
Egypt and 111 on. The minority Shi·
ites pined cootrol In Iran doring
the 1979 re'IJIUlioo and have been
"exporting" their revolutioo ever
.

ins new qc of temlrism -

·~INC.

By

sioee.
'
The Suoois have never been
tnowo 10 view llmlrism • a viable
JIOliticai llilfeiY against the West.
Jlut that is now beginning to
change. In Egypt and Algeria,
some orthodox Saoois have
become convinced that the only
wa~topple secular governments
is
tarorism.
war in Afghanistan dur·
log the 1980s was a breeding
around for dlousands of JiOtential

Letters to the editor
Responds to charges

VOU )AY YOU'RE A

SMALL

[IBERAL, TOO?

WORLD...

Sara E k el

Trad,ing for trade

.

the,~ in this room knows that a vote to delay is a vote to kill,"

m

Cocmer Secretary of State James A. ·Baker
said Monday at a White
·Houle uaemblqe«GATI' ~ from both parties.
Next year Cooareas would
to start over. The so-called fast-track
~ lhll requila ~or DO votes with DO amendments- siJ!ee that

would require renegouatinl! with the ~23 other countries involved would have IUD out.
1t took thole countries se"¥CD ycirs to ncgotialc GATT, which is supposed 10 be effective lao. 1.
·
, ~)' 33 have ratified it 111 r.. "The rest or the world is lcd;ing at
"Clinton said Monday. "We can't wait untiiiiCltt year."
Ill,An unlibly alljaoee of CODSijiiiCt activists, conservatives, labor, textile
industry inteleltl. and Ross Perot. who threatens a third pany mowmcnt,
are try1oa ro block GATT.
·
.
·
nie Houle .as first. Speaker Thomas Foley and Speaker-in-waiting
Newt Ginpidl both back the implemeotina bili. It'•IOI!gbcr in the~
which is due to vote on Thonday, since a majority won't suffice.
Approval wiD like 60 votes to comply with budget~
'·
That put Dole in a pivotal JIOiition. 111111 be llled it adroitly.
Fint Sell. Jeaae 1Wm1.1\·N.C.. wanted GATT delayed untiii99S,
aatinJ dllll CliDtDD mi&amp;bt have leiS trouble with him as chairman or
·:=e Senile Fordp Rd•donl Commiuee ~ the ~t would fF:C '!'
waiL TbCa Sell. R'*" Byrd, D-W.Va.,Jhc .emor Democrat.. 18ld Jt

.::-=::.e

~

moWd in with his effort to tie GATT IIJIIIOvaliO
.... - • J1io1 taX Clll Rcpubllcloa •ve been advocllin&amp; for years. "I
~......-dill dla'e'llbould be IODIC deal cut," ainton countered.

·
~- dcalt.Jlo CIIDC away withleaetl from the Treuury, the Com~from ~ ~te ~ c;bief ci staff, one from the
~ve, JJUillll&amp; his deal m wriling.
.
'li ,_ a
bulpoblbly uaeful excn:ile for an administratiou
.1111&amp; ill =10
ee ~for lbe IICltt two years, or IUD
iDio_,. diiiii.S. m tbe GOP
. ' ll ~- ..... "!liT f 100:. Delay getS risk, Mel overreac:hins il
allllid Wlleil dlo pru damt 1 party IXIiltrols Consres$. let alone when the
. . . li I d . lfiia!p.

tnai:C,:&amp;:=
us ·

_...,"II'··

C

If the police do come, it's
unlikely that the case will ever go
to trial, or even make it into police
records. In Washington, D.C., of
the 18,000 domestic violence calls
police received in I 988, reports
were filed on 44; none were prosecu=t.
In New York City, which has
mandatory arrest laws (police ue
required to report every domestic
violence call), lice JePI)Ited ooly
30 percent ofthe 200.000 calls
received in 1992.
And of the domestic violence
arrests made in Connecticut in
1992, only 14 percent ever went to
trjal. ·

.

·
If the victim really beats the
odds and the case makes it to the
courlll, the chances her .assailant
will ever do hard time are, once
again, slim. A study done in Pennsylvania found that of the domestic
violence convictions made in
Philadelphia Municipal Court in
1~9aod I990,1ess than I percent
· ijlvolved prison temls.

~uslim terrorists. "Thoo'saods of
Muslims from rougbly 4() IXIUDtries
flocked to Afghanistan following
the 1979 Soviet invasion," lames
Phillips of the conservative Heritage Foundation recently wrote.
"Radicalized veteran.• from the
Afghan Wit••• have retmned home
anil have become the sPcarbeads of
radical Islamic movements in Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bosnia, Egypt,
Sudan and many other places
around the world. Hundreds of
these 'Afghanis' are being trained
by Iranian Revolutionary Guards in
Sudanese trliniog CIIIIJIII."
- Weaponry has become.more
widespread and sophisticated.
While World atllention hal focllled
oo the proliferation of weapons of
mass destruction, conventional
explosives are getting smaller,
deadlier and easier to COiiceaL
One top-secret report by the
Central Intelligence Agency, to
which our associate Dale Van Atta
was given access, wains of the
tial prolifCIBlion or "invisible
c::bs." These arc described as
secret, sophisticated explosives
undetectable by standard bombStatthing techniques.
·
· . Several years ago, CIA agents
were tipped off 10 this by a defector
from a radical Palestinian guerrilla
.group who told of an explosive
molded iniO the eanlboard of a silitcase which he carried into a Geneva hotel room. The bomb was
located and, indeed, was not
detectable by modem bomb-sniffing devices. Its only distinction was
an odor like vanilla, according 10
our CIA soortes. ,
- FBI and CIA officials fear
that the recent crash of a private
plane on the South Lawn of the
White House, and the lone gunman
who opened lire through a White
House gate have alerted foreign
extremists to possible weak spots
in die president's security. They
fear copycat incidents may not be
quite as harmless.
As recent history su.,.,ests, terrorism in the futute ~1fie1 to be
even IJKl'e random and = y than
we've come to espect. As the former Soviet Unioo has splilltered, 111
too have the 111dical orgaoiWioos
that keep a deadly vigil against
peace and cooperation.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Anderson ue writers for United
Feature Syodlc:ate.loc.

~Ona !be IUJVivon ue two lOIII and dau&amp;bten-ID-Iaw, Keith and

Local News in Brief:
Recycle day set for Friday
W.VA.

Str:l):

By Tile AIMcltiW r.-·
Jlec:ember will be oot or c~t~racter when It arilves In Ohio on
..Tlllnday.
.·
-. The National Weather Service
. aald It will be partly aunny over
.IDCJit or the ata1e with ltlilpellillrea
. cllmNDa iDto the SO..
, . Weathes C0DC1it1oDa tooigbt will
,range from partly cloudy skies in
·.•the northeast to clear elsewhere.
, ·Lows will be 2.5·30.
: · The recDid-bi&amp;h taopctai•R for
. this dale a! the CoJomlius WCrlw
_.ataUoo was 11 degree• In 1934
·,wllile the record low was -4 in
1 19S8. Slllllet llllillbt will be at S:07
.p.m. and sllllriae 'lbunday at 7:34

with a few flurries central aad
north, mainly Ibis momiog ...Except
snow showm likely In the extreine
northeast, accumulating 2 to 4
lncbea locally. Partly cloudy in the
far south. Highs in tbe lower 40s
north to the mid and upper 401 ear
south.
Tonlght. .. Cieariog. Low 2S to
30.
Thuraday .. .locreasiog cloudiness. High in !be mid 40s to the
lower SOs.
Edended forecut: ·
Friday...Partly cloudy. Lowa
near 30. Highs in the mid SOs.
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Lows
3S to 40. Highs SS to 60.
,:a.m.
Sunday...A chance of rain oorth..
Weath• forualt•
west. Dry elsewhere. Lows 3S to
·. Today ... Vulab1e cloudioesa 40. Highs from the upper 40s to
.
mwerSOs.

Middleport parade slated
,
(CI!Iillt d rr- Pap 1)
·
More lhlll $3 0011 in !Dzca will
·.: be alva~ away duriol! tbe holiday
:; seuon. Winners should pick up
. pr_izelal.the bualoeasea. they win at.
Gift cel1ificatellliso will be award-

Middleport Department Store,
Wllllam Rlghthouse; AB Cutting
~i ~~l:::.:!. ,t Fitness,
Ruth Canter; Acquisitions, Derek
,Stump; Farmcn Bank, 1oe Bailey;
Western Auto, Shirley Caruthe(s;
. ed, Dooley said.
Middleport Trophies. Linda Mayer;
· The first drawing OCCUlTed lut 0cncra1 ~ Sala, 1oycc Handley:
woek. The men:lllota IIIII ~ axre- . · .
:
. ajiOIIdl~~ inc:I. .: Dairy" ~:~~:~~.~~n~aro::
~ ,_
• WoodWIId; ~ son's Video, Homer McCirty;
lie • Reata~t. L)'llda Gilkey; Middleport Flower Shop, Hilda
' =.:,~~L=;~ Weaver: Gingerbread. House,
, Doria Roberts; Valley Lumber, Savannah Duncan; Ohto River
Marie Snyder, Mill Street Boob- . Bear Co.. Healbcr Buctley;
·Tom Peck; ~y Statioll
Country Natorala, D~lla
Lou Hl'tdlltm'
Statkey; Furniture 011 T, Jeff Ridg... Vaughan'i Cudinal, Rachel way; Comer Restaunot, Deldra
Manball; Loctcr 219 May Molla- Crou; Qoallty Print Shop, Carol
han· Babr Clothier F.c!ith Reiser: Nlcholsoo; Dottle Turner Realty,
Mlli End Fabrics, Elaine Miller; Robert Stewart; ~oreman ~
·losels Furniture Karen Gllltey· Abbott, Pear Ruuell, McClure s
Johnson's Vul~ty, Kay Ingels; :CS:'IT!~= Wolfe; Peoples

Crafts:

·Postal commission to rule
,on stamp price increase.
WASHINGTON (AP) - lt'a
or Ifor when: SlliDP
Jlrlcea ue aolnll up In January.
Only the amount remains to be
decided
The lodependeat Poatal Rate
CommluiDD 11 about to rule 011 the
U.S. Postal Serv.lcc request for a
· dlree-eeot lncreue, bringing the
price of a first-dan stamp to 32
not a qUCitloD

can."

And so, domestic violence fmds
a curious place in the American
justice system. It is taken lightly.
not because it is so.rare or difficult
to comprehend, but because it is !10
commoo.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, cua·
tact America Onliile by callin111·
800-8%7-6364, ext. 8317.)
Sara Eckel Is a syndicated
writer ror Newspa,r J!;nter·
priae Associallon.

That would 1111!111 • extra 60 10
7s eeats per 111011th for the typical

holllebold.
The boost would be part of a
.IJI'(IJIOICII 10.3 percent Increase In
ioallin&amp; IXIItl to be applied to all

C

•ow

•

I ,. ' , \

•~

- ~-

. ..

...-·

···· -- ,
'

'The Daily Sentinel
(UIN21Uf1l

- " " ' - - . ......., -~~~ 1
- , , Ill c.t
0b1o. br lllo \
- Cllllo Vtillot Nililll.. C I , ....._
'.
IlL. , . _ 0111o 4S'Ht, ft. !192·2156. '

a. - , .

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1

l

..-.no.\1" , . - . ..... Oblo

He 44' ..

,

' 1'

l
'

, ''"'"'
:'
n. Doll1 1111 -...
1 m Coo
1
,l.. 4S78.
' •• '
rt
' ·· )
Pcasq-

SltoneJ'•IDc.----137
Star Bull - - - - 3 5 314

Wendylnt'L--.----·14 111
Worthiqma lnd.----·1' 1/2
a~k _ . .

10:30 ••
"""' jlroYided
•..,...._.,.by -.-:.:
~::-::-;
quotea
"'
ol
the

GaWpolll.

:

Unlimited tanning for month of
•

1J W I

:..-----· - - - --$'ll.U

: w - -- --..:.----...$4116 '

til-.__OAC...,

-...$14.111

.D:w-a...,-----··------...Si
:W------------.. SliOJO
AO i
••• 2

- -- ...-

-

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.

.•,

Boosters to meet

VEl'ERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions - ' Mary
Evans, Portland; Cecelia Lisle,
Syracu.e; CODDle Morris, Racine;
Charles Aeltcr Sr., Pomeroy.
Tuesday disdlaraes -Edward
Wood. Columbus.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dllc:hara• No"· 29 - Alvena
Hill, Mrs. William Beach and
daughter, WWiam Sheets.
IIirdla- Mr. and Mn. Charla
Dempsey, soo, Jackson; Mr. ·and
Mrs. Allen Jeffers, soo, Poiat
Pleasant, W.Va.
. (Puhllllled with permlllloll)

$30

The Me' High Band Boosters
tgS
' the
will meet Monday
at 7 p.m. m
band room.
Classes offered
Tai Chi classes will be offered
by Eric Chambers at the Middleport Arts Council buildi_ng _beginning Monday and contmumg on
Dec. 1~. and 19. Cost is $15.

111 IIDOild II., _Polnlnly

YOUIIIDEHIDII'
AlllftiEIVIII
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48", 54", &amp; 60"

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ons

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773·5583
..

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· · . ,·

Welcome to Our Annual

· ·. , ·

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE
Sat. Dec. 3rd &amp; Sun. Dec. 4th 12 pm • S pm
• Poinsettias • 6 colors • Poinsettia Baskets
• Cut Trees
&gt;For the loved ones ~ Grave Blankets ~ Monument ;_
Sprays • Vases &amp; Wreaths

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

i '. ~yracuse, Oh 992-Sn&amp;

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Just in time
for the first
Snow&amp;
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Flexable
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Sleds

FREE REFRESHMENTS DOOR PRIZES

· iiWIIII CHilDS
MULlll MUSSER.
IISUUIICE ·

December '
Call949-2373 &amp; make your
appointment today.
,\

•
•

be." .

HospHal news'

(Fonnerly 'sandy's Video &amp; Tanning)

Nct'_
ljtl_
.,_
.. ,
..,._
_
lo _
..........

IWLiilliiCIIPI1Clf
-OAC...,

··
.
:

(Coatlnuecl trom Page 1)
anylhini" . . - . .
Obstructing Ju.suce IS a founh
a three-to-five year seniCIICC. But,
later information conflicted with ~J!II!C feloo.,Y ~hahle by a maxthe original story, Meigs County tDium 18-tDODth pnson SCI!tence.
Prosecutor 1ohn Lentes said in a
Len~ ~ he OOc:sn t foresee
previous interview with The Daily Rhoades pnsoo Slay will .change.

Announcements

AnhnlnlmlnboothefrDDt(IIIC
of~y'SD.lity SmiMI IDtlocuralely Identified a Joc;al blto:l tam
, p
that was In Sunday 1 o111eroy
=
· nen..-"-fnDonsBatDD
..,.....,....
liCiuaDy was !be pictule.

·~-·--···2-blolo.
.
QWII......... - - .

-

Suspects get probation

This case had minimal physical
evidence and would have been
based on the victims' testimony
against
the defendants, he said,
"We have no plans to put in a
military force that can fight its way adding his office devoted more
than 400 hours to the investigation.
in " he added.
As the investigation evolved
'Strained relations between the
information
about the incident
United States and its NATO part·
changed,
I..entcs
said.
ners and the continued harassment
"The
story
now
is that they
of die 24,000 U.N. peacekeepers in
dropped
her
and
(Rhoades)
off and
Bosnia - 400 of whom are
detained by Serbs as insurance they don't know what happened,"
against NATO air strikes - have Lentes said, adding that alcohol
led 10 calls for a withdrawal of the was a significant factor in the incident ·
peacekeeping force.
Leittes admonished the two for
British, French, Canadian and
hindering
the investigation and
Bangladeshi troops make up much
Rhoades'
prosecution.
of the fon:c.
"They watched as Bengy
Senior military officers, speaking on condition of anonymity, Rhoades did his thing and didn't
pointed out that U.S. olfteials have tell us anythina." Lentes said.
looked at a rescue mission, and that !'They should have told ... instead
tens of thousands of ttoops would of acting like they didn't tnow
be needed to light their war in and
out. But the administratton has
~!!town lillle en!husiasm for such a Columbia Trustees to meet
11e---eotum bia--Tow nsh io--~d·
move.
Trustees wiD meet at 7:30p.m.
day at the Carpenter lire ltall.

Correction

3rd Street, Racine, Oh

..-..,

·

.

from Bosnia not necessary

liNOLI a.r,..ca
...,__
......___,c.

._,...,.,

tm.

u.s. hopes rescue mission

Sunshine Video &amp; Ianning

fo --·'DICialllpalloDIIj '

sso,ooo bond against Crisp

mooey, Oisp has paid n:atitotiOD or
about SI41,000, Including $7,g75
for Christmas bonuses, $20,000 for
~tioD llOIII and S120,000 for
illegalietilwx:dt Cunda. aaxJidio&amp;
to court reconls.
The $120,000 .ID retirement
funds had been sipbooed rrom the
LCCD, a public entity, to the private Leading Creek Watershed
Association, according to. court
reaxds.
The watersbed assOciation rented the dillrict'&amp; buildin to the publie district at $120.~ for six
years' rent, wbich wu paid io a
IIIDlp sum in 1987, according to
court recorda. The $120,000 was
· then to be applied for a tetbcmeot
fund for the board members, of
whidl Crilp wu the ODiy one ellgible.
No sta1ua hearing dale was let in
Tuesday' a decision. ·

tion of state routes 124 and 338,
brush ftre.
RllTLAND
\1:30 a.m., Ovetbroot Nursing Stntiul.
The prosecutor's olfwe worked
Center, Arthur Barr, Veteriuis ·
closely
with,tbe vii:Wn, tryitl( 10
Memorial Holpilal; · ·
satisfy
her
and she was satisfied
6:22 p.m ., State Route 124,
with
this
ODICODIC,
assistant proseLinda Mitchell, Pleasant Valley
cuting
anomey
Chris
Tenoglil said
Hospital.
ter;
Tuesday.
SYRACUSE
5:06 p.m., South Second Street.
"Because there were so many
12:19
p.m.,
Tyree Boulevard,
Martha Andcnon, dead on atrival.
conflictin'
factual matters and
Racine, Vytice Sellas, HMC.
RACINE
statements
ID
this case, we decided
TlJPPERS PLAINS
7:29 p.m., Walkers Alley, Mary ·
this
was
the
best
way to handle the
10:53 a.m., Number Nine Road.
Wolfe,HMC;
matter,"
Tenoglia
said "Sbe made
7:5S p.m., Racine and Bashao Ray Smith, SL Josc:plt's Hospital.
a
con~cientious decision to pccced .
v~ and Racine squad, intenecin this matter and she knew full
well what the final outcome would

Ooa-.'--- - -· ---- --...Sl.IO
Ooa ......--'-----·-------""
Ooaftlr •

-

The

changed because an appeal pwbedl
ded
by his attorneys has cone u •
Favreau said. MagnUDl Drilling of
Oblo had posted the cash bond on
Feb. 6,
"It was $II appeal bond. He's
appeared every timsaidehe~ad (a
bearing)," Favreau
. •... purpose of a bond is to ensure that
someone appean."
. ·
Crisp wu found guilty of the
five misdemeanor IXIUDts in 1991
and then he appealed the case to
the OhiO SUJftiiiC Court. The bigh
court returned this case a year ago,
upholding !be local court's decisioo, accordina to Meigs court
reaxds.
Accused of stealing teas of
thousand&amp; of dollus in public

Units of the Meiss County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded eight calls for assistance
Tueaday: Units respooding included:
• MIDDLEPORT
10:47 a.m., State Route 124,
Hazel Beubs, Holzer Medical Cen-

!:::::::::::::::::~~Tbe~a:•~u~w=*~dne~to~r~~~tiog~.~

..r-----·------11120

(Contlaaed from Pap 1)
jailed II would be auel puoisbmeot
and if he died in jail the county or
state could be sued.
·

EMS units record 8 calls

. . . . i ..... M'ID

l)fantor·--

Crisp given temporary

The following cases were resolved Monday night in the Pomeroy
courtofMaylt John W. BlaeUoar.
Forfeiting boods were: 1a)'IDD itllis, Pomeroy, $83, expired _registtation; Lydia Rossen, Clifton, W.Va., $63, left of center; Christopher Murphy, Racine, $64, speecl; Juanita Olristiao, Nitto, W.Va.,
$66, speed; Matthew Cilrt, Laopville, $61, speed; David Dowler,
Parkersburg, W.Va., $63, wrong way on a ooe-wa~ street:
.
Gloria Slayton, Rutland, $68, speed; Tammy Bishop, The Plains,
$60, S!'Ced. $83 expired 1811Sj ~y Bush 1r., ~tart, W.Va., $6~.
stop stgn; 1crry Barney, WilkeavtDe, $83, fteUbous tags: Davtd
Dixoo Sr., Chillicothe, $64, speed.
Pined wae: Usa Gilmore, Oteshire, $SO piUS' costs, DO insurance; Patrick Cleland, Pomeroy, $63 plus costs, failure to comply;
Edward Thscker, Middleport. $63 plus costs, failure to comply;
Shawn Rollins, Reedsville, SSO r.lus costs, speed; Deborah Oliva,
West Columbia, W.Va., $43 pus coslll, assured clear distance;
Nonna Eakins, Pomeroy, $47 plus costs, speed; $63 plus costs, no
operator's license; Sheila Hodges, Rio Grande, $49 plus costs,
speed; Ronald Pridemore, Pomeroy, $80 plus costs, no insurance.

. WASHINGTON (AP) - Tens
of thousands of U.S. troops would
be needed to rescue U.N. peaceita Dec. 6 meeting in Tampa, Fla., keepers from Bosnia under hostile
or a apeciai session a week later in conditions, but Pentagon officials
Washington.
say they hope such a misSion WOII't
The price of a stamp has beeal · be necessary.
29 cents for four yeus - the
Any such operation would be
loosest period without an Increase mounted under NATO auspices,
since the post office betame a but U.S. forces would be expected
semi-independent agency in the to play a major role. Planning offiearly 1970s. .
cers £or the Joint Chiefs of Staff are
studying exacdy what the U.S contribution could be, according to
senior
officers, who spoke on con.f\tr
dition of anonymity.
Some 2,000 U.S. Marines arc
Am Ele Ponr
...33 liB
Abo
----..55
aboard ship off the coast of the forAabJand O D .341/2
mer Yugoslavia, but their mission
AT&amp;T_ _.,
is to rescue do~ NATO pllots,
4
not to mount a
evacua..
!!,?~ ~;!e!~~~
·~..ud ~.•
,.. 1
day.
'"f' , .....:...
I
"Those are tbere for contingency purposes as a rescue team ... if
;;· :~
uo:iii we had to go in to rescue downed
airmen or NATO airmen, they
Lands End ---------16 1;2
Limited lac.
lUI
would be availahle to do that,"
Multimedia lac.
"314
Perry said on CNN.
PoiDta.-p
U
RtllatKe Eledrk-----30 711
Rollbl• A Mytn
1~ 314
Rnval Duteb101311
-,
11

from," a..t .....

Mayor's court resolves 19 cases

- ~~~~E.'!"~!'f.~ -~~

types...:::Oa,.,mluiDD'a
coultha
effect • 10011 udedaloo
J-.1,
The date will be set by the post
office's aovemlng board either II

:lf

,

SEAsoN PRIZE - Local •mten wwn ..t tbe ciDiy ctMI Ill

take hCIDM deer to renwmllll'. Here, l'lortda'a Kea a..t aW WI
ftnt Oblo buck ev• in W. ftnt trip to tbe B-.,.. IICate- aa 11polnt, 170 (ICIIIDd deer. '"I'IIe)' bve DOfbl.. like tllll wi1en I'•

A Pomeroy 1outh was taken to Veteraos Memorial Hospital
Tuesday with mmor inj~ received in the crash of a Gania-Meigs
Head Stan bus on Salisbury Township Road 20A (Ball Run), the
Gallia-Meigs Post d the State Highway Patrol reported.
Richard Reuter, 3, 36070 Ball Ran Road, was treated and
released, a hospital ~ said.
Reuter was a ~er on the bus, driven by 1udy 1. Carte, 49,
2122 Turkey Run R
Cbcshire, that was southbound, two miles
north of State Route 143, a1 8 a.m. when it went off the right side of
the road and struck a ditch, the patrol reported.
The bus was slightly damaged. the patrol said. and Carte was
cited for failure to cootrol.

. .,.

ceDIS.

pear

f

Pl.= =

December to enter mildly

hS

I

A recycle day for ~ bouldlold appliances will be held at the
Meigs County Litter ContrOl Office on Union Avenue Friday.
Those leaving appliances arc to be placed at the end of the parking
lot. just off the pavement.

Passenger injured in accident

WOBC, the·U.S. 1usticC l&gt;epattment found that about hlif of ihe
domestic violence incidenlll that
were classified as misdemeanors,
were. in tenDS of liodily injury, ·as
serious or more serious· than the
assaults police would normally
· classify as feiQnies'.
That's right, same bruises and
broken bones for the victim; radically different treatment for die
offender.
.
.Police contend that the sheer
volume o£ domestic violence caDs
prevents them from gnmting a tun
response to every j)IIC, ' 'H we'w&lt;ilt
out there everJ time a man threatcoed to kill his wife," said a Minnesota police officer, "we~d do
nothing but n:spond to this type of

c

~I Andcnoo of Lake Forat. Calif., IIIII Tom ltld Muilyn AndcrsoD
of Middleport; and 1 dlughll:r, Carole l'alnlr.r of Columbus.
·
. Services wiD be Friday M I p.m. in the F'l5hcr Funeral Home, Middle- .
port. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may caD
at the funeral home Thursday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m,.

• IColumbus !soo I

wisli tltCre was another lower calliWhat's bugging the body more on Christmas Eve 1992. ooloogeradvcrtising.
gory
'cause you'd probably,, be in
politic? The mailbag knows:
Walsh caught the big fish, all right.
T.G., Benton Rubor, Mich.:
that
category.
'
A.G.. Rockvale, Tenn.: You Bush released tbcm,llill wriggling Tell the whole uuth about the
·
1oe:
I
ioclude
your
musinss
ooly
reported dlat1esse Jackson and and squirming, and watched them Florida Citrus Commiasion, 1oell
Their sales skyrocketed in July. to prove to doubting friends thllt
Ralph Nader might fono a third
pany. Is this likely?
The National Organization for lowbrows like·you aciUjllly exist. .:
D.M., Florence, S.C.: Eighty
}
Women's boycott wu a joke and
Joe: A 1ackson-Nader ticket?
percent
of the news media -votell
The Shadow Senator and the
your picture •n our· local paper
for
Clinton.
You have forgottea
National Nag? I suspect the swim away.
·
,
leans to the left!
how
you
and
the rest treated Bilsh
Democrats would love 10 be rid of
L.A., I..ancaster, Ohio: You stat·
1oe: When the piclutc faeea ld't,
and
Quail
(sic).
How about doit)t
the gadflies who muddle their mes- ed that Bill Clinton was perhaps . it's a sigtlallll my Commie friollds
your
duty
and
let
the people know
sage but, DO, it's not likely.
one of the smartest men ever to · to ratchet up the Plush Rush propa.
what
Truman
thought
about b~
O.D., 1oplin, Mo~ You bemoan hold the office. Frankly, Mr. Spear, pnda campaign. ·
the investi11ations of Slick Willie even, ELEMENTARY students
M.S., Hanover, Pa.: You will The news media ha'vc hiddet! it Ill)
•
and Stippely Hillary, but r.ou were know that to be a falsehood.
lind the Florida Citrus Commission maybe you didn't know.
Joe:
Thank
you
for
the
newl
all for -the fishing expedition by
1oe: A clipping enclosed in had a SIX-month contract with
Lawrence Walsh; The failure of L.A.'s letter· gives me pause. Rush Limbaugh. The cootrlll:t was clipping from the Florence, Morn'
that boondoplc to tatch die
"Chelsea Clinton's math home- finished in SlX months. No one ing News that told us the facts
about Hury Truman that the~
fish targeted by the Democrata · work 'is a atruggle for ber dad,'' was fuedl
sticks iii your CIIW.
says the USA Today llllly. "P!esiJoe: You say Rush's contract has been coVering up. It was ven
.
Joe: I think lou missed a few dent Clint!ID told USA Today .. t was not renewed, I say he was enli htening.
You
may
write
to
me
Cld
JJCWS.storiel wbilc you were visit· he's 'not smart enough' to help his fired. You say toe-MAY-toe,l siy
log the plaoet·Pluto. You 1ee, bao-. daughter anymore." Alii can
toe-MAH-toe. Bottom line: Rush Of the New~ EnterPrise AsticJ;.
, cooira prosecww Lawrenee Wallh L.A., il that if math-is the measur- has been flushed atld the boycott is \cialioll, 200 Park Ave., 'New Yorli;
,•
actually obtained 11 coitfessions ing stick for smans, I am one dumb ove! an~ I can quit drlriking the 'NY 10166.
(For·laformatloa
oa
tli
and convictions, including thole of son-of-a-cosine.
Califorma toe-MAH-toe juiee that·
COIIIIIUlcale electrODlcaUY ......
P.W., Sedalia, Mo.: My hope i8 was giving me hautbam.
Oliver'Nonh, 1ohn Pjlindexter,
EUioU Abnims and Robc:rt .McFar· that ~ush Limbaugh win keep on
R.B., Pittsburgh, Pa.: I've tbla eolumalst.and otben, COII1 ·
lane. Two Reagan-appointed · telling us the reaJ £acts. We can't always heard that great minds talk 1aet America OaliDe bJ c:alllllll'l
judges threw out the North and depend on the newt media.
about concepts, regular minds talk ION%7436t, ext- i317.) "'"• ' l
Poindexter convictions· on techniJoe: I occasionaDylisteo to Real about things and small minds talk ·
J01ep• Spear Is a •~
.~
writer
for
Newspaper
.
call~. /+. pervetlign of a presi•! Facts Rush myself wbile havins about people. You fit in dlat last
. _ _ . _..__
•• J
'
,.
~ 4
· named George Bush pardoned five my morning orange juice that be is category as do most media ICUID, I . ftBIRKIIIUU..

•Y·

Mutha B. Andcnoo, 78, M'uldlqlon, died onexpectedly Tuesday, Nov.
29, I994,a!her~
·
She wu born 011 Milch 30, 1916 in Meigs County. Sbe was a former
Middleport lchool coot. 'WCilted for sevaaJ years• Swilber·Lohae Pharmacy in Pometuy, wu • IICQllllplished I!CIIDSIJ'CSS, IIIII belonged ID the
Middlcpolt Prelbyterian Chlllth, where i6e was active in the w0mca's

IToledo l49" I

Choice words from the· reaCting pullnc·
OSep

Martha E. Anderson

MICH.

Battered women: ,Too many··to p.rote_o~~:?:· ·1;
say; 'My ex:.OOyfriend il over hCre
bothering me and trying to get in,'
it could have the effect of slowing
down the police response in many
cities."

--Area deaths-

OHIO Weather

Weclneeda~, Novemliet~0,1884

WASHINGTON - The dawn· these radical ·new offsprioj wili
inlu· gain power and influence by fanllUflled with Jut yelr's blast at the ning the flames or fear and hatred
World Trade Center - will be that continue to CODIUIDe many in
IJKl'e virulent, more dangerous and
IJKl'e difficult Ill SlOp.
Though tllm has been a recent
Jack Anderson
lull in major terrorist attacks
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
against the United States, several
and
sources believe it is the calm before
Publllber
Michael Binsteln
a veritable Slllllll.
One reason is that the Mideast
peace
process is uaraveling day hy
MARGARET
LEHEW
CIIARLF.m: BOqLICB
day
·despite the recent peace the region.
Controller
General Mlmqer
Hussein MUBSIIwi may have put
treaty between 1ordao and Israel,
it
bell
He is leader of Hezbollah, a
and the historic visit by President
·anti-American group
virulently
Clinton to Syria Yasser Arafat' s
lEITERS OF OPINION 1ft! welcome. They obould be leu IbiD 300
based
in
Lebanon
and SIIOIISORd hy
influence among Palestinians is
wonla loDJ. Alllollal 1ft! AJbject to ediliD&amp; lllld muat be •i&amp;D&lt;d with DIDIO,
Iran.
He
has
said:
"We ue not
waning by the day, givinf new
lddnu lllld telepbo~» oWIIber. No lllllisood lottm will be publilbed. Letters.
fighting
so
that the enemy recogstrength
to
radical
rejecttonist
llbould be in Jood tute, eddmlinJ iauea, not penonaliliel.
groups who believe terror, not nizes us and offen us something.
truce, is the best way to push their We are fighting to wipe out the
enemy."
agenda.
What set the February 1993
Most of these groups do not lit
World
Trade Center bombing apart
the proftle of "traditional" terrorist
from
previous
terrorist acts is what
organizations, whose ranks have
been inftltrated by spies in recent did not ltappeo: The bombers made
years. Rather, this new threat no demands, asked for DO IXIIICCI·
comes from smancr, ad hoc groups sions and made no claims. It was
indiscriminate act of pure
Dear Edillr.
was cliarged with escape from the that are bent on violence for reli- an
aggression,
and very indicative of
gious, ethnic or CC(]IlOmic reasons.
IIC8llze the uews staff can only Middlep&gt;.njail and burglary.
what
terrorism
willloolt like in the
He could have faced :16 to 90 As mainstream groups in the years ahead.
prillt what law officials relate to
Mideast
trv
to
accommodate
peace.
lbem about our jllllice sySielll.
years. He ended up pleadiDg guilty
It Is my opinioo that Mr.l..eotes to all the charges and received
(oounty prosecutor) doeso't seem eight years in which he will do
10 know the facia, or docao't care, two-lhirda or about live yean. This
WHAT A
wblch I'm s1111iDglll believe Is the 10111 had a recml ci amcd robbery.
c.e, w111111 be CODtioues to CCIICOCt
H Mr. Leotes is worried about
llle ..ue story even liB beiDg told dangerous people, why docao't he
that they ue lllltrnel Mr. Lentes tell the public how this 10111 will do
•YI I've esc;aped IDBDY limes from · less time in prison than what I'D be
Ohio llld Weat ViiJiola.
sentenced for fleeing and taking a
FACI': l'w never been coovlct- pair of handcuffs! It's a matter of
ed or eva~ dllrBed with escape in public recml.
aliy other II*.
FACT: If tbere's anything Iii the
He hal been quoted saying for cliche: "The truth will set you
111e Jlllt elgbl moolb• how danger- free." Mr. Lentes is doing more
11111 to the publlc I am.
. time than us an.
FACf: I have one first-degree
David M. Pelscos
ml~ assault that slm!rnM
Meigs County 1all
from a ligbt at a bar in Middleport.
Editor's note: Persons
And the most dangerous thing remains In the Meigs County
about this case was a one-car road Jllll, pending his Dec. 1 trial on
block 011 a four-lane section ci the felony escape charges. He Is
highway.
accused of jumping from a VeferMr. Lcntes talks about charges ans Memorial Hospital window
filed against me in Alabama, for In April. Last week, he was ~en­
assaulting a police officer and driv- tenud to :).S yean In jail on
log under the iDflueoce.
charges of felony auto theft and
FACT: I have no charges in felony fleeing. Pending the reso•
Alabama nor was I ever charged lutlon of Meill' County charges,
with assault on a ~lice officer or Persons faces escape char~es In
driving under the mllijCDCC. I was West VIrginia and attempted
d!@!'ged with possession of mari- escape charges In Alabama,
juana and public intoxication.
iK:cordlng to the Meigs County
This is all a matter of public Prolecutor. AI for the indlvldlllll
record and 1 would· be,more,,than !lelltenced for thb year's rest-stop
hlfl!yiO fumish a jX)JIY of theJ~ robbery he could possibly. ,han
io aayooe ,ioteresied. In a tCU'ot faced this sentence If aD oll'eDMI
Mei111 C01n1ty case you may recall .were stacked. Tbe rest-stop rob- . The OJ. Simpson case put the prison. In fact, the sentencing
a citizen was robbed and beaten at- . her will also sene between lilur phrase "domestic violence" on JUdge, Robert E. Cahill, said he
a roadside rest. The suspect was anct elgbt years In an llllnol• newscasters' lips for a few days was reluctant to give him any
indicted on charges of a1!8f11V&amp;ted prison for breaking bls proba· last summer. Thea we heud the prison time at an and did so "only
robbery, felooious assault and then
lion, the ~tor •kL .
terrible statistics: that domeslic violence Is the leading cause or in~
to women. and.that anywhere
C
30 to SO percent ci an WODJeo murdered each year Bill killed by a man because I think I must do it to keeP
they knew. But for the most part. the system honest." he said. ·
the issue was presented as an
"I seriously WOIIdcr how many
appalling
fact
of
life,
one
that
law
men
married five, four yean would
By WALTER R. MIWlS
and society were helpleSs to remc- have the strength to walk away
APSDedll C=aHat
WASHING
- 'lbele'$ DO mis:t Bob Dole for a ~of dy, and auention quickly went back without inflictio$ some corporal
punishment," the Judge reasoned.
a senator, but when he cuts a deal, it
y fits the ~· That's tothecircusofSimpson'strial.
But
a
more
recent
case
in
Mary. Now 1udge Cahill would ~eenainly 111 111 the blrgainl be g« for pushing the world
' agreement
land illustrates just how much- or bly strike most people as a jelt. his
that Plclideot aintDD dc8penfdy needs IIIIJIOVCCI in Coopas this week.
The ICIIIIIlr from Kansas, 10011 to bO the ~ty leader in a Republi- little - can be done to protect a sentence an aberration. And while
can Senate, wm a aweethean deal for his JlU\Y. a Catalos of adminislra· woman from being harmed by a the fu:st point would be relatively
easy to argue. the second, uofottutiOD commitments on matters from patents and wheat subsidies to liceos- lowr.
It's
the
case
of
Kenneth
Peanately, is DOL
•log fees for the lalelt in wireless telephones.
cock,
who
confessed
to
killing
his
The fact is, assaults against
·P1111, be wm a system to review and pedlaps re~ the new Worlcl
·Tnlde Orpoizatioo that would eofon:c the new Gcncral Agreement on wife after he caugbt her in bed with women are almost always taken
another man. WeD, 1101 right after. less seriously by the criminal jusTariffs and Trade.
And he got a )IIOIIIise that the Democnltic administralioo will at least He didn't kill her immediately. tice system when the offender is
consider die capital gains tax cut Dole swted bargaining for in die first First he dnmk some beer and wine the victim'shusband or boyfriend.
and argued with his wife for severFirst of all, it's harder to get
·place.
hours.
THEN
he
killed
her.
He
police
to respond to a call in a
"'
All that for helpiq a Democratic president on a trade accord that
pleacJed
guilty
to
voluntary
domestic
violence dispute. "Peqlle
Republic;~~~ presideiita launched and backed.
manslaughter.
often
advise
battered women,
', The qercisc was a Sllldy in the kind of bargaining Clinton &amp; Co. will
What do you suppose was his 'Don't say it's your husband or ex'have to do ooany maj&lt;Jr legislation in the Republican-controlled 104th
sentence? Fifty years? Twenty-live boyfriend. lust say someone is tryCoogress that coovenes Jan. l
years? Ten?
ing to break in"' says Ellen Peoee
· Indeed, before he even started bargaining, Dole had .conditionally
was
of
the Battered Women's Justice
Not
even
close.
Peacock
eadorled GATT. "My intention was ilways to fix il, never Ill kill it," be
sentenced to a mere 18 months in Project in Duluth, Minn. "If you
~
.
---- Bur-lf-ftxlng-lnocant waiting until Dellt-year,when Republieans-wiD
'control Coogreu for the lint time in 40 yean, the result would. have been

111 Ccnut Street
Pomeroy; Oblo

~

Page 2-The Dally sentl,oet ,
Pomeroy-Middlepo~ ()Jllo ,·;
:

~e

'

orn~~~2~5

: , ;.: .

~ut;A•·~~a

�-·

, . ;:":" ~ ""' r-' r ~ ,.,. r · t- ~...:r. .;e. .f-L ~..J: ~ • .. -it' ... .. -.f•.,..."""',.. -v otl · e... ... ~..,....

•

The·Daily Se~tijt~'

Sports

p-- ·H

'•. @ - ....

of Gosben'.s David Knoll (6·6,
265), Clyde's Brlaa Musser (6-3,
26S), Dylan Evans (6-2, 28S) of
Gallipolis and Elyria West's 'Max
Niml (64, 310).
lo the backfield with Morris lR
Trenton Edgewood's Jeff Miller
(1, m yards, IS touchdowns), Cal
ShrlmpliD of Warsaw River View
(I,I25 yard&amp;, 79 points), London's
Fled Lester (1,265 yards, 10 IDs),
Roser Hamilton of Oab Harbor
(1,22S yards, 20 TDs), Heath
Hutchinson of Gallipolis (I,249
yards, 21 TDs) and Duane
Hawkins of Elyria West (I,l47
yards, 22 IDs).

u.u.. 11. w.,.-...
S-11, :m.rr.; Toa
at both qUBI'ttlbldt and defensive c.dlr,
Lab. 6-1, 206, Sr.; Joe luckier,
back), Lemon-~onroc's Tyler C11toa AYOa
C•"·· , ., , IPO, Sr.; N111 lob1101,
Williams (nine Interceptions), -.we. 6-1, 195, 1r.;
Lomoit-Moon&gt;l, $-9, 1110, St. Bocb: TIAYJJ
Clyde's Chad Long (eight m~ WYUB,
IIION'TON, 5-9. 165, Jr.; T71or

llld&lt;-.-

tioos) and Mentor Lake Cadlolic I

w-.
lelt-.

Wlllllml. '-Wo6-2. 170. Jr.;
Cllod Lo••
5-11,165, ~ Joo
Mootcir LUa Calb., S-10, I'IS, fr. " ' - 1m11
81111', Sl. Clnbom, 5-11, 20.S,Ir.

o,-,
Joe Walland (also a star in the
offensive backfield).
Olr................ ,....
Tbe first-team kicker was -W.Jirloih.
Poland's Brio Daskourdas, who
-lall-.
converted 13-of-18 field goals, -olllo.
Ceae• ef ••• 1••• lob JecobJ, Col .
lncludins kicks from 47 and 42 lloSol&amp;
I aJ'
.._
yard&amp;. SL Paris Graham's Treviu
Jolla Wlltoa, lollilal, 6-5, 2:10, Sr.;
Blair, wbo bad a 44.8-yard aver- ,.,..l!adt:
c.a, eo-. 5-lo, 1:10, Sr. u - :
age. was tbe punter.
IJYIII Drll, lolbrt.. AI... 6-J. 215.1r.; 1111
z.rtu, !lola... luc~:otoo Voll., 6-3, m , Sr.;
Jacoby had the core of last 1111
Hlldobrood, Loufnlllo, 6-4, 305, Sr.
year's S-S team bllck and wentlO. ~
1-• Voia,-., 6-0,190,
0 against a schedule conslstlns Sr.; Mill D'Orulo, Col. Dollllo, 6-3, 110, Sr.
BUiy Rlmil!Oa, Clrdo.WO. 5-S, 1411, Jr.;
Jobnsoo led a StcubeoYillc 1e1111 almost exclusively of Division I -Brtu BICM.
tlbrtcllnUII Cllymont, 6-0, 170,
St.:
Mill
WIUit. Vlllllllloo, 5-11, 2115, lr.flloNt
WOII tbe DIYbiOII m poll dlle aodll~ll.
" - Lob, 5-11, 110, Sr.; Doo wu-.
aod fiDished tbe regular IC8liOII I().
Here s tbe I994 Divisl011 ID all· 'l'boiNI.
Loui..IUo, 6-1, 191, Sr.; Plll Cc&gt;aclo, CutA&gt;a
0. He was io 011 65 tackles, iDclud- Ohio high school football team, Cilia., "· 205, Sr.; ,.,. Me" ,_. . . . . .
s-10, 170, Sr. - . aaus N"IIIR""N,
iDS IO for lost yardage, IDd also selected 011 tbe rccOmmcodatlooa Sll.
llllHI'OII,5-II, 21$, Sr.
of a state panel of sports wrltcn
atarrcd as a IUIIIIiog back.
Jolnlos him at linebacker are aod liloadcasttn:
~
· -:T.::;
~·acanau.
""
~·Sr.;
bltlla
-. ...... u.
Ted Ucuc of St Marys Memorial
1•., St. IJatMc:M: 8roct ....... I
Birjlt: loo T""'Y• Sprtqboro, 5·1'ool-9, 165
Palrfltlcl Ualo1, 5.9, 111, Sr.i Cbld Flow..,
(S-11, 20S), Avon Lake's Tom
· Salor,
Tlliiii9Jiii!S,
6-1.
175, Sr.; TomTIIORNYILLII
Pllllrt. Mollk&gt;r
Mtedowbroot. 6.0, 175, St.i IJQ
Carder (6-I, 206), Joe Buckler of SIIERJDAN,
Bollaln, 5-11, 170. Jr.; BJ. Dnlo, U1111
Lob Ctlb., 6-3, Ill, Sr. ~ Do'fid r-,
Canton Catholic (6·3, I90) and ac.bta. u. 26!. Sr.; llrla - · Clyde, H - . 6-J, 215, Sr.;
j.
175. Sr.; lrloa B1cbt1!. (:aoiWd. 6-2. W . lr.
Lemon-Mooroe's Buck Grccu (5- 26!, Sr.; DYLAN BYAilS, OALIJPOUS, 6-2, a,loeb:
IJID Critllp, Loulatllle, 6-1, Ul, Sr.:
215, Sr.; Mu Nlxo1, Blyda W., 6-4, 310, Sr.
9,190).
Qunttoact: J.a Morrtt, ....u w. a - . 6-0,, Somlolouloa,Dolaw.-.OIIotaeJ,S·IO, 170,
Up front arc Andy HabiDI of 1!10, Sr. -~~~~-. 'J'raiDa Bqowood, 6- Sr.: lllf Root, llullhoa IIdia, 6-4, 195, Jr.
,_lolollolil*, CoL Twp., 6-1, 16f,
Sr.: Cal Sbrl!qllla, w._IU..,VIoW,"
Columbus DeSales (6-3, 245), . 1,112,
I. 195, Sr.; Fred IAobr. Lolldoo, 6-0, 175, Sr.; Sr.;W..~Nonnlk,S.IO,IM,Jr.
Napoleon' s Shane Stoner (6·2. lo... HlllliltA&gt;a, Oolt Harbot, 5·11, 190, Sr.;
24S), Elyria West's James liliAn! lllTI'CHINSON, OAWPOIJS, 5·1, a,....-a.m,.-&amp;..m.Wo-l!lloa; Doo llcbordtoa, 11om11toa-.:
160, Sr.; nu-llowklu, Bl,.&amp;a W., 6-0, 205, Sr.
Dlckersoo (6-2. 245) and Clyde's -.artoaDit...._,l'lllalld,
Doo Rlcbardtoo, Hallliltoa Bodlo: Juoa
6-0, IIO,Ir.
~.Woarooa-w.-o;c..,BII*,
Ryan Carter (6-6, 260).
S~ Eua7 Popo, Cia. P11rvoii·Mtrlu;
I
J
-:
Ald7
lloblq,
Col.
DoSIIII,
6-3,
The secondary consists of 245. Sr.; Slluo SlOw, llaooleoo, 6-2, 245, Sr.; lflct
'II'Uaoa, HamlltA&gt;I 1to11: Cllrt Wlllloml,
lroolon 's Travis Wylie (a sllllldout 1._ Dl-1, Blyrio 'If., 6-2, 245, Sr.; Ryu Lonlal: Brlu 111-. fnatlla; 1 - AI-.

IOday.

Morris, a 6-foot, 190.·-pound
senior. was selected as o«eoslve
player of the year, baaccl on the
rerommeodatlons of a state media
paocl. Johnson, a 6-I, I9S-pouud
senior, was picked as the top
defensive player.
The COicb or the year was Bob
Jacoby or Columbus DeSales.
Morris completed97-of-167
passes (58 peltCIII) fa I,662 yarda
durlui West Bl'llllclJ'a I~ regular
seilon. He passed for a school·
tccord 2S toudldowos.
He will be at the OODIIOia when
West Braucb meets Clyde fur the
Divl&amp;lou III state championship
Saturday at 3:30 p.m. at Paul
Browu Tiacr Slldlum lo Maaa111011.
Oo the first-team offense, the
eoda are Spriogboro'a Joe Torrey
(S6 catches, 785 yard&amp;, IS touch·
dowus), nm Rhodea or Thomvllle
Sheridan (a llandoutii!CCiver aod
blocker at tlght cud IDd a solid
linebacker for a I0-0 team) and
Mc:utw l..a£ Catholic' a T1111 Pikul
(37 catchH for 703 yarda).
1be offc:uaive JiDc Is Cllllposed

Scoreboard

Wtdnaaday, November 30,' 1eM

Dol'-,..,.." ... ,....

u.r

----- =·•

I

••

lttllll-.-.

.....,._

_..,_

Cllt«, Cl!do, 6-6, 260, Sr. IJaobockcn: Ted

Mouoe Lemoa· Mo•roe: Toby Hlba, Cia.

"'-·-.Allor;

•

•

I'I

01--

•'

WALT WILLIAMS

w-

a..tadoad W. a-eo: TJtoo Wilt«, a..,rta
--..;11m a-,..tt. ~.... LoU; .,..

Clrod-. ........ - c - a d , Lilla
. . Aile
Dnlo, . _
Ryu Mo&lt;lbao, Nrpolaoa; Don
llintr. lIMia
a d y - ' r. Sllolby; Bd
......_
_
... ....._ 1 1'1111.
CIJdo: Aod7
Sl. ...,. _ , Doo
Crookltt, O)'dt; Du Ltt1a, B~.!rtat·
z•
o;
Tn&gt;y SIIIJ, Ontallofd; Moat Olaolo,
HU..o; 1111 ~ S.l'OIII;-

Tba=,

...... A........., 1onmy
""''Lob;
Ll11llia lollll•, -~~~ Cllril Ottoy, llocty
111-. WID s.- 1.ora1a a-...: a..-

Siric:bet, IMila 8root1ldl: Braat

a-.

Ia•••••·

Cot- IUIIolobalfy, le!f1rt0o; 11m A,...,
-LoU Ctlb.; Jollo w....,,llll&amp;ril 1'11111
x-o; Torry Nowbart. Jllfonoo; Plall Rlaa,

_....._Doul-.,

Nf!w '-7 - -.6 • 9 AOO

w~ ---A 1 .364
Ph
· ·.----A
lollanL
____.3 II .ID
m

5
5
5J6

C.lrolaJM!LAND ___,7 5 Jl3
llldiul .• _____ ,7 s
5 .513
Jl3

~

C...., NA---10 1000 IZJ
Roo4,8,, _____76 ICD6 13.5
11!un, Ja1. - --" Pit 14A
lllUol, Sol. ---64 I:IZ 13J
lolilbum,Doa. ••• - 64 &lt;m 7J

a.loao- - - - ·6
Cllloqo..----·-.6
lollltnubo ____ J
Adlall

I
I
2
3.5

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
&amp;lit
~ I-.:111111.

6
6
7
9

.

'''

Utall --·-----·9

I

Dollu------·7 4 Dooftr ---.........6 6 JOO
San -··--·6 6 JOO
MlM&lt;Icu ............... l 13 .011

LA. Clppoa ........ .O 13 .000

CJ.

CB: Witt PrMIDII, lroatoa; Duaty Wud,
-V-Oioolly;
.

- .761 11M
A11oa, lollu. ........111 Ill
~NY0 ..231 770

3.5
9.5

2

z
z

IUIOo, AIL·-···-·90 ltJ73 11 .9
JUco,S.P.... - ..••.10 1109 13.9
Roooi,Jollu.._,__,65 9ZS 14.2
Sbupo.O.B. - .....65 753 11.6

3.53
10

Cry,.,....

~o.lou.atL.A. a-,4,.m.

N.Y. Oloalo 11 aJM!LAND, 4 P.""
llulftlo 11 Milrrd, I p.m.

Jollomj .. Owl«&lt;o. 7:30 p.m.

CLBVBLAND. 7:30
.

Moaday, Dec. 5

l'boaaia .. Clakqo. • p.m.
S&amp;n Ancooio d SO.W.. 10 p.m.

No. 14 Ohio University to take on No. 3 Kentucky tonight
By MIKE EMBRY
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Third-ranked Kentucky Isn't
cxpcclios a ooc-man sbow in No.
14 Ohio toniJbL
"This is au outstandius ball
club. as s!l!!!l !! !eam !!S .we Jl~Y all
year," KeuDJCity coacb Rick Pitlno
said. •'There may be some teams
wilb better talent aod depth overaD,
but they wOII'tDCCCSsarily be a bel·
tel team."

Gary Trent lfllbbed most or the
auentiou last week after leadlos
Ohio to the Preseasoo NIT title. He
avera1ed 2S.8 points and 14.S
rebouods iD the four games.
.•'He bas the size, strength aod
qui~kucu to be a srcat NBA
~" said Pitloo. "He's cer-

.WI)ly/'J:tbiot, a lottery P.i~:.For

that matter, a bigb lottery pick. · ·

not a team that has just bas one
Docs he detect any we•Jmessca great basketball player...
io Trent's play? .
Pitloo is C01ICCI'IIed about Ohio's
"When you're averasinl 26 strength on the boards, where it
points and almost IS rebounds a averases 12 more rebounds than
same I tbink you're pretty stroo1." oppooenll.
Pitlno said
"We cannot be dominated on
Wbile Trent will be die focus of tlie bk:kboal'd to wiD tb1s IIDIC.''
Kentucky's defenae, the atber Bob- Pitloo said
call w011'1 be i8JII)Ied.
He also n&lt;*d that the Bobcats
"Ooe of the thlogs that every- are boldlng foes to 26.7 percent
body will conceotrate on Ia stop- shooting from 3-poiot range while
F.&amp; him, and that will be a major billlos 35.2 percent of their shots.
mistake because they have so many Kentucky made 8-of-I6 io i11I24other sood basketball players who 50 season-opening victory over
undentand their role,' Pilloo said Tenoessee-Martin 011 Salurday.
before practice Tuesday.
•'This Is a team tbat you CllliiOI
"I've always subscribed to try· leave their DCrimcter people open .
lng to stop the sreat basketball or they'll kill you from the 3-poiot
player because that's wbat they lille, .. be said.
piiiCtfce," he added. "But tills Is
Sopbomore forwarci.Cwtls Simmoos avcnses 13.8 points aod 7.5
rebounds while junior guard Gus
Jobuson contributes 11.3 points.
Sopliomore guanl Gcno Ford averI,OU
Noble .........................845
Ottawa.........................56
64
Sports brief

ages 10.5 pointed and 7-2 junior
cc:ulft Jasoo Terry follows with 7.8
pointa and 2.0 blocked shots for
Ohio.

Kentucky bad no trouble in
whlpplos TCDDCSsec Martin u fur.
ward Jared Prlctctt •cored 2I

Co!Ulty

JS

.1m

423
ISS
633
878
1,286
114
2SS
450
170
602
358
2S9
4SI
263
724
1,663
220
30
129
318
248
88

Adams ....................... 3I9
Allen ......................... 112
Asb1aDd .....................S9S
AShtabuta ..................(D7

ATIIENS ...................91S
Auslalze .................... 107
Belm011t.....................S18
Brown ...............-.......308
auucr ........................108
Carroll .......................570
Champaigu ................316
Clarlt ......................... 13S
Clermont ...................371
CliDton ...................... 131
Columbiana ...............67I
Coshocton ..............l,284
Crawford ................... 140
Cuyabosa .................... 22
Darte ......................... 136
DefiiiiiCe .... " .. " " .. " .. "347
DelawlR ................... IS4
Erie............................ lOt

Thursday, Dec, 1 Open til 8 pm Parade at 6:00
Mike and .Reebok
Hhlrts ,
IIJ 1 at Reg1lar Price,
Get 2nd Yl oft

Richland ....................486

Rou,,,_,......................789

Sandnsky ................... I90
Scioto ........................272
Seneca ....................... 287
Shelby ....................... 221
Stsk ..........................332
Summlt........................73

Trumbull ...................SSI
Tuscarawas ............1,2S8
Uokll ........................ 194
Van Wat....................83
V1NT0N ...................98S

WlllfCil ...................... I30
Wublngtoa ...............974
Wayae ....................... 153
Wllllams....................631
Wood. ........................133
bD"'' ..................JSi
Totall
37,rt3

WQJ~~ens

Dress Casual
and Athletic

Our SALE ROOM
1f2 off Reg. Price!

Shoes
51000 off
Stop in for refresliments anti rrtJistufor merchant tfraWj:"'!~' .

In 196S, Bob Hendley of the
Cubs set a record by pitching a
one-hitter in losing to the perfect
game of Sandy Koufax of Los
Angeles.

6S7
262
145
98
478
Nolan Ryan set a longevity
I,095 record io the major lea~ues pitcb·
I46 log lo 27 seasons, 26 bemg COIIICC·
399 utive.
22S
27S
lo 1920, Babe Ruth bit S4 home
408 runs for the Yankees to lead the
76 American Leasue and runner-up
542 George Sisler bad only 19.
1,411

.___ _ _ _.;. &gt;tl.J; ; ; ;:; .; ;O. ; s • n u to win a :P.

THE

Hallc:oCk ....................152

I,6S7
I32
140
304
I,461
144

.air o Sfwes! \ ':.

Hardin .......................226
Harrison ................. I,2SI
HCDQ' "':"""'"";........183
Hisbtaoo ...................438
Hocldn1.....................828
Holmes ......................7S2
47o
JAC~ON ............:.,.116
Jcffenoo.:............... 1,372
Knoll .........................7-'9
s3

648

I,217
911
4I4
I,275
I,SS9
I,038
94
SI7
1,225.
355
1.S3

.Huroa ........................

w ............................

LAWRENCE ............-'11

LlckjoJ ......................9S8

LosaD ........................380

LclrUI ........................ I72
Lucae ......................... I40
Madln .................... I07
MalKDDJ ..................2S2
MarloD....................... IS3
Mcdlna ...... :...............198

·MEIGS ...................1,023

Mcrcer.........................86

.

rt, 0. 992-5627

260
88

-'32

B11tem

Some 'things
last forever.

1,222

I73
524
116
2.111.

45,325

keatucky

(10-2)

at

v.....,.....s.... (li-O.I~-

, _ Modiaon (I().Z) llloiARSIIAil.
(Il-l). I p.m.
MeN- ..... ( I ( ) . Z ) . - (10.

2Pp.m.
"r.;hc!rim Slaro (9-3) 11 -

Major men's
college scores

Slaro

(11 -1 • 3 p.IIL

East
A!f.ld69. U...u.l 66

P
dl2. Toledo 59
llolyc-79,Hulf.... 69
.
Uxaa lolond Uaiv. lOO.Iolodctr EVID

64
Proridme ?1, 8oiiOa Uaiv. S3

Syra..,..ll, ColaN~
ToWIOO St. 69, JM.t Sc. May'.. Md.

61

Sheridan Poll

South

Y1o11 ~c-or., NJ. 76
Wolte Fontt74, Dovidtoo 61

Transactions

Mldwal
Akroo61,W'"'~!.

season with a home leasuc same
against Trimble Thunday.
Southern returns seven lettcr.mc:u to tbe lineup ~ poatiog a 317 rcconl as mostly frcsbmco aod
sopbomorc ooe year aso. Retumios
to tbe lilleup are posts Jcsslka Cod·
ncr, a 5~ senior aod Brimme Ploffitt, a 5-7 sophomore, who bead
coach Jenni Roush says must !Je
toush in the post offensively and
pull in the bulk of the Tornado
rebounds. Sammi Sisson, a 5-6
junior and equally toush in the
post, will be called upon to play
strong forward and off guard, as
will southpaw Bea Lisle. a S·S
junior guard.
Other returnees include lonna
Manuel, a S-8 junior suard and
Tornado sharpshooter, who will Clllles IIIOUIId.
Rebounding could be another
pair up with point guard Renee
Turley; a 5-9 IOilboolorc guard, the wcakucsi, u Southern lack&amp; the
product of a fine AAU summer height of a true ceoter. Howeber,
season. Another retumcc is Becky box-out techniques have been on
Moore, a S-4 junior suard, who the practioe agc:uda tbrougbout tbe
will be.called upon to provide some prc-seasoo.
offense and is the SHS defensive
Tbe attitude at the Southern

Top ranking fresbmen Cynthia
Caldwell, a S-S guard aad IeDDy SHS,'Meet the Team'
Friend. a S-3 suard will add some slated for Thursday
spark to the youos but veteran liDc·
up. They are Jcamins the system
Southern High Scbool will bold
and are expected to contribute a "Meet
tbe Team" Tbunday at 8
quickly.
p.m. immediately after tlic girls
Rousb will besio ber tbird year
at Southern as varsity mc:utor after pme.
Admission is a two-liter bottle
starring as au all-state guard at or pop,
VCR tape or a conlaioer ol
Meigs aod tater at the University ol Gatorade.
Rio Grande from 1988-1991.

~1112.S_,_..SL I4

Far West
Col SL·Fullcdoa 10, CS Noallui... 71
Colilomio 69, N. AlirAtll 66
c.1onoio 71 , Cc&gt;lando SL 51
ldaboll, W. Onton70S..boSI. 59

Ohio women's
cQIIege scores

992-5776.
bocn Daily 9-5
~unday 12-5 .

Adolto 63. Olalo N - 61(01)
Allolani 16. lndltoo.I'L 75
Bddwla-W•Uaca 10. PcalD St.·

.-=-

yourhomeequitylineata orgiveusacallatl-800-677fiXed rate and tenn by using 4994. But act quickly. Deals
our lock-in option. ·
this goop can't be preserved.
.

~

~

"'-

ralio ::~

BcMnd73

A field goal il! football w~s
originally five points, then .four m
1904 and three io 1909.
"

Une:

(Unless otherwise noted, al
doubleheaders wlll begin wltl
reserve contests at 5:55 p.m.)

SEATILE MARINERS: A....d to
wi1b FoJb. Fermin, infielder, on •
two-yoar coatnct. Daiputod Jeff Dar-win, pik:hcr, ror ...apm...

House

UlriU

""""'"'"'and entertainment

Pictures with Santa
Football
NFL leaders
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
!Iaiit

~ Xdt.DipL

BLUE, CIIL ..IIO UN 1(10 I

3

Thursday, December_l
6:00·- 8:00 P.M.

IDOLPB'I
DillY VALLEY

After the parade!

•·

.

"

Bank One.Athens.NA
Member rotc

-

.

The~ ~lelines

I

IJ

I

Dec. 8 ....................... Viotoo County
Dec. 12 ........................at AlcxaQdcr
Dec. 15 .............at Nelsonville-York
Dec. 19 .............................atEastem
Dec. 22 ...................................Mdss
Dec. 23 .......:.....River Valley-3 p.m.
Jan. 4 ..................at Symmes Valley
Jan. 5............ :.................... .....Millcr
Jan. 9 ................................ .81 Belpre
Jan. 12 ...............at Federal Hockin&amp;
Jan. 19 ....................Symmes Valley
Jan. 21......... .at River Valley-1 p.111.
Jan. 23 ...........................at Wellston
Jan. 26 .............................at Trimble
Jan. 30 ... .......................... AlelWidcr
Feb. 2 ...................................Eastern
Feb. 6 ................................ .al Miller
Feb. 9 ................... Federal Hocking

Whatever it takeS.

MtmberPDIC

'Mili'!un 1r1e em:atl\t is $5,axl. The fajy ndexed APRCJ\
hlo WI a 100% loor&gt;bWIJ9
1, 1994 was 11 .75% APR.
CJ\
may
- - i'lcrWecr decnlalle. no1 10 BllllOild 25% inOla. w'JOS t1e Is dlsccrolirued ....,flellral)'t&amp;', clcoirQ OOIIlS cJ up ID S300 v.il becterged. The lmJill fee is $50. Rales available only 10
new en One 1-b'ne EqUty LlleCtJS10011l18 CJ\ new~ tone cqJIIy hlo wit\ a &lt;JIIIIfyl1g loor&gt;bWIJ9 raliod 100%. &amp;.t&gt;ject IO credit IIRJ!tMII. CooSIJI yw lax IIClvis&lt;7 regard.
. i.a
ing ddctt&gt;iily cl i0013sl. PlppQ1y rwance may be teQUII!d.Asmall fee Qli88 for h La cllfae lOck ta&amp;ILte. Ollar 9liPieS Dect!nW 31, 1994. ICI 1994BANC ONE CCif'lf'rnATJalj

•

:

"'" W.•lt'l ......,

1,964
~)

.......................... ... ~

Aolaltool75, Woltb 73
- 11- -1- - Bald,.;,..Wolltoo19.Jitol!o!!J, W.VL
70
Buwllnl Onoca ... ~56
Oedanillo 10, w;u..~.... ""

Noa..-fenoce IICtloa

you~thavetopayanydos'IOfl\l(loutmore, stop by
ing costs- and you can kee!i any BankOne banking center;

)

nee.5.................................atMdp

......

Ohio men's
college scores

No clnsing costs

Thebestthingsinlitedon't
last long Uke Bank One's specialod'eroolmleequitylines.
RightllO'ty,when you get a
Sank One lbne Equity Une,

~

\

..._ v- N111- 109, a.....
ltod63
()uaallaOIII, ~. N.C. 70

'T' in

1994·95 agenda

f:.::

U111174. ~ SLw~•-59

... -

Htln•

Southern Tornadoes'

- NEWoftlaePiooi4c
........
YOIUC YANKEES
: ~
llmXIW...__ pdcboo,""'-dan
oulli&amp;hl ollipom.., to Col- of abe
!niOmltioaol Lcquc ODd becuno I floe

IAioll!lio 69, St. P'-65
NakaooK-73

·Free Christmas Layaway
Middleport Dept. Store

ule and will play Mcip 011 MOll·
day, Dec. s.

ol Bliaefiold ol tlae A-tibioa U...-:
and Dave s,..s.a;n ~
bi1lin
iMtrudor of Bluoiiald, !tip
~~~~

Noo1h T1111 99,11aJlor91
TOlu97, Lomu54
Tau Toch 116. llowlon Bapoilt 12

Polrliold 12, Toledo 59

WATCHES

S0111bcm will baYC a toup cmfere:nce mel DOD~ . . . .

lhc Colliomia l.oaJU!: Al»y ...........d Claarlio l'll1ao pilcbiraa-

Southwest

Noa..-ferace IIClloa

----------

UICI.

=e;

lowa103, Drai.e61
KaoouSL 92, W'a~ .-l'ldalido1S

Abila 61, W. Uberly 63

--------

Prc·ICUOO acriJDml&amp;ea. eiJIC"
cially agaioat JacbGD U.vc IC*
well. The~ IIIIMid lite biD wdl
and worked for a aoocl slt.ot,
although reboundlns wu weak
aa:mliDSto the coaciL
Southern Ia expected to move
the ball ollc:ualvely oat or ai'MJIIoe
offeDJC and 1e1 up IIIII down die
floor 011the faalleltOoe of Soutbem's•IR*IIII'IIIIiiCIIca..:be~to
victory will be ill aurciClve
defense, wbicb Rousb cites, "we
hope to COIIttol the iolctllity .S
play pcssure dcfeoae for 32 IBID-

BALn~mfis: N•m•d
Julio llln:il ooacb ..,. Oaril LriD pildl·
ina c01cb of Bowie of tho E1nem
Mike O'BIIIT)' ....,.pr: Lorry
piadWo ooacb; and Joo Dwham
coach of Freleriet or lho CaroliDa
~ 1"uu Blocltwoll ~ ...J lclf
Morria rriubin1 cooob ollfi&amp;b n-t ol

Cc&gt;nnocliall90, Duke 16
Plooi4c 9 1 , - Cc&gt;llop 65

WuhlopiiSLI7,B. - - . Wyoa!ioa92.1loav1&lt; 61

things don't.

Roush will be assisted by John
Manuel and Robert Brown.
Rousb holds a positvc outlook
for tlie upeomillg season, not1o1
that several ptayen have improved
their same over the SUijllllcr and
that the team is M
ready to play.''
The vetenm coach also cited uperieoce and the fact her players are
Mtougb, bard-nosed players, that
never give up" as sttengtbs for ber
club. Likewise, as a weakness,
Roush cites the lack of someone to
step forward as a leader and overall
lack of team beilbt as weakneases.
Southern bas overall good speed
and good shooting ability wbeu
working for a good shot. With nine
players the bench is not as deep as
Rousb likes, but notes that she' nbe
aNe to work different people io and
out of the lineup. Southern also
looks to improve as tbe seasoo progresses, loolcinS for experience to
take over as the mid-season point

&amp;a.baD

Bowlin&amp; Orooo II,
36
BuB'olo 61, Mo.·IUntll Oty 67

Qtn74, Po&lt;i&amp;12 (01)
-Coi69,N. Iowo61

·AntJsome

Southern girls to start season·
Thursday against Trimble

.
camp bas beeD v«y good, and the
Southern lost three sirls to grad- team is "ready to play,"
uatiOII, key ballhaudlers aod offenRoush also cited that Soutbcm's
sive sparts Jo Amber Oblinger, overaD loteusi\Y must ina'ease.
Aimee Mills and Christie Cooper.

CorlL F1ari&lt;lo 76, Mollina 61
Qlldol 66, W'.m.n ol: Muy 64
eom.oo 96,0ladoalm SooMhom66
B. K&lt;allll:ty 14, Oaiap St. 70
Ploddo St. 95, Souo1a Plarldo II
Gotqe MuoD t-40. Vvs' r 99
L$Ul6,- St. 71
louloluoTocb16,B.U....63
Mu)oltod 92, loyolo. ..... 61
· MonnoadSI.IOO,ea.r..61
N.C.-...-m.70, ·69
N.C.·Wilaolaeloa 75. ~ 60
NW louloluo 100,5122
Cuv1loo 90, •
Q
s.Cuv1loo 11.12. s.
Sc. 69
63

at...._=

- JookiDg rorwart~ to llleiiJICl-••lclliMo95- whlda begllll Tlaunday
Trimble. Ill tile hat row are l..t c-=11 _. ._.,

Cyutlla Caldwell, SUDI Slaoa, J- C ' w,
JoDDa M111111el, Brlllllae ProfiiU, 1ectJ M 1ft
and Jeuy FrieDli. Ableat were Bea Lilli ...
Re-Tvley.

specialist

Vaanont 101, SL Midlal'1 76

~~...!a:Codt11

1,100
88

· Now Open Fat
Christmas Season
Poinsettias-6 colors
Poinsettia Baskets
' 96
Foliage Baskets
I-'S
Christmas Trees
305
For
tbe loved ones •
246
I62 Monument Sprays, vases &amp;
I,326 .
Grave blankets.
ISS
Hubbard's Greenhouse
. 91
.Syracuse, Ohio
827
' 89
827

Saturday'&amp;quarterllnall

Notro DomeiO, !Ddimo79 (00')
sw ldUooual St. II,61

SHOE PLACE

219 N. Second Ave. Middle

I99

Orccne ....................... I~
Gucm&amp;cy ................1,329
HamlliOD .................. .150

NCAA 1-AA playoft's

Southam MiA. 61, Tn.-CbltLulqa

I73
I,463

&lt;Jeauga ......................318

MUIIdJtliiD ........... ,.I~

Pumam ...................... 118

409

Chddrens Athletic
Shoes
20% Discount

All Mens &amp;

77

279

......... -.....;....~

Pickaway ...................361
Pike ...........................527
·Portqe ......................227
Preble ........................ I60

Nlke Caldera Boot
Mens and WCIIItlls
Reg. 560 SALE 542•00

I64

I,07S

. Tbunday's 11111e1

and tbe ICIIOD opener.

151

Fayette .......................122
Franldin .......................84
Fulton ........................ 1S4
GAIJ,lA ................1,180

~

Perry..........................786

483-

- paiifieJ&lt;I.: ...................340

~ ..........................81
I
~ ........ .... -., ..,,....81
· ~ ...;...........&amp;
• ~ ....••,..........,•.~ ..752

Pauldins .................... 209

Kentucky reserve suard Chris
Hurlsoo has been cleared to play
io tonisht' s same 1o Rupp Arena.
He suffered a fracture io his right
llaod and missed two eulbilious

Cfiristmos Parade SpecialS

First-day deer kilf list
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Preliminary county-by-county
Dgurcs showiDI tbe Dumber or deer
killed Oil the lint day or tbla year' a
deer gun season, compared with
official fi1urca for the fint day ol
the I993 ICIIOII, as provided by the
Ohio D1Yisl011 of Wilclllfe.

llllliou together 011 the floor.' •

points to lead 'seven Wildcats In
double flaures.
•'I thlok coach Pidno bas the
best team lac bas ever bad since
rorilns at K~. " &amp;aid Obio
~ Llrry Hunter. 'They're very
deep llld am JIUI all sons or cambl·

LA.IWdao "San Dqo, 9 ......

CLEVELAND at Milwaukee. 1:30
p.m.
O.Wcr fi Dall.u, l:30 p.m.
Mimmw. 1\ Uub, 9 p.m.
lndilnlll LA. ~ 10:30 P.""
HCJJitOn atOoWen"·Statc.l0:30 p.m.

Sol....._,, pt1

Sendllel Comspoadaat
Nine slrls arc c : a a fpr
startiol .1oM 011 the I
SOuth·
em basketball team which begin Ill

Woabioala&gt; at T...,. Boy,l p.m.

s

VAltSITY TORNADOES -

By SCOTT WOLFE

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·

• . NBA standings
•

Meigs• Walt Williams receives D-Ill all-state honors
By RUSTYMILLEit
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Beloit West Branch quarterback
~eff Morris and Steubenville
liDcbacker Nate JolmsoD woo the
top awards 011 the I994 Associated
Press Division lD all-Ohio high
acbool football team announced

.1994

·,..

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97 North Second Aveoue • Middleport

I

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•

�Page &amp; The Dally SenUntt~

-~lddlepon,

Pomeroy

Wedneed8y, Now.mber 30,

O_hlo

Holiday .
Fruit Baskets

EASTMAN'S

$4

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oinsettias
Just

99
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ADVEII'IIEDITEMPOLI:'f.EacltoftheseadwrtlsedllemslsreqiAredtobellldlyaYalllbltfOrllleln

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will offer ~u your choice of a(omparable Item, when available, reflecll~ Clie same sao.ings or a
ralnchedc wiKh Wll entitle ¥011 to purchlle the aclwrtlsed Item It the 4eltlsed Pl1ce within 50 ·
days. any one vendor coupon Will beacctllted per ltan piJ'Chased.

DEALERS.

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Limit one case ~lth coupon and $10.00 additional purchase.
Coupen Good Through December J, 1994.

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~------------------------------~
11J SIZE CAUFO/lNIA

REGULAR SCENT ONLY

seedless Navel
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Bright
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FROZEN, SELECTED VARIETIES .

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COPYRIQHT 11M. THE KROOI!R CO. ITEMS AND PRICES 0000
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27, THROUQH SATURDAY, DECI!MIII!R 3, 11M IN
POMEROY.
.
-.
WE RESERVE THE RIQHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO

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By The Bend

Ohio

November

The

The Daily Sentinel.
.

.

Wednesday, November 30, 199f

Page-t
Ohio University ·
College of Osteopalhic Medicine

Family
~edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associale Professor
of Family Medicine
Qucacion: For several yem, I've
been putting a small amount.of
Vaseline in my noae each Digbt to
keep my noatrila fnlm gelling too
dry.. Before I did this, I'd have
trouble geUing to alccp bta•ll(' my
noae felt so dry, 8Dd I would wake
up each IIIMiing with dried blood
in my nose. Now, I have neither of
these problems, but I've begun to
wony if tbla a good ..-acticc.
Answer: A dry and Irritated
nose certainly Is uncomfortable.
This is commonly a nighttime
problem, just as you describe,
because the normal nasal seaetioos
drain diffc;reody wben we lie down.
Also, during the night we don't
swallow and drink liquids actions that help keep the nasal tis·
IUCimoiat.
The petroleum jelly you have
beell using coats the delicate nose

tissues 8Dd helps moisturize them
in two related ways. It f~ a barrier that keeps tbc air from gelling
to the nose tissues, so it can't dry
them out And. it also retains the
normal moisture produced by them.
In general telUIS, petroleum jelly
is safe to use. However, there is a
potential problem from prolonged
use u you deaaibe. This problem
arises because the petroleum jelly
doesn't just stay in the nose but
ratber IJ!iJralea to other parts of the
body. tf it did stay put, 11 wouldn't
ueed to be reapplied every DigbL
Petroleum jelly usually drains
•out of the back of the nose with the

pie

lung tissue to identify the

specifiC type of IWJg dlseue. If the
awse is petroleum jelly, the diag·
nosis will be "lipoid pneumonia,"

because lipoid IS a doctor word
meaning an oil-based substance
lite petroleum jelly.
So, to IIIIIMr your qnevioo, it is
dangeroua for you to be using
petroleum jelly iD your nose every
Digbt
Question· Have you bad patients

with this "dry nose" problem
before? What do you rerommend
for tbla Jl'(lbltm?
Allawcr: 'Die SympiOIIII of "dry
nose" are typically due to one of
two rommm· ClOIIditloos. Very lky
air causes die aose to dry out at
Digbt 1bis Ia oftal a Jl'(lbltm in die
wil!ter. 1be beat trealmCill for it is
the use of a vapmzer or humidifier
In the bedroool to bring the moisture of the air up to a more comfortable llld bealtbfullevel Use of
a non-prescription saline nose
spray also provides safe although
temporary relief from the annoying
dryness.

Rot~rians
The Middleport-Pomeroy

Rotary Club ~bserved Tbankag!v·
mg at the club s annual turkey dinncr Monday uigbL
Donald Vaughan from Vaughan's Cardinal market in Middleport
was the featured speaker. He wu
acrompanied by bls wife, Pam.
. Vaughan spoke about the ori·
gms of the market.
Vaughan's Cardinal opened on
Sept. S, 1977, after some rather
harrowing beginaings, be Slid. As
the A~P closed, Ricbanl Vaughan
and his father were applOidled by
the Meigs ln.vesbnent Colporation
10 be.gin a new venture at the same
location.
Richard and bis family were
always poor people, but tbey bad a
dream- a .dream to own their~
shop, be sal~ and they were pven
tllat ?JlPOrtunily.
Richard Vaughan bad been a
meat cutter for A&amp;P and bis father
had worked for Penny Fare.
Richard began to approach mem·
bers of.bis family to begin to set up
a fam1Iy-ow~ed and operated
supermarket 1n the former A&amp;P
store, Vaughan said.
Mr. Vaughan sought a familyteam approach to doing business
and looked at ways to meet customer needs.
"Grandpa Vaughan said 'We
gotta Iotta work'," Vaughan said.
The Vaugbans did have a lot of
work abead of them, aca&gt;rding to
Vaughan. Tbe store began in a
structure of 3,500 square feet and
was considered tbe fifth largest
store in tbe community.
.

A second common cause Is
allergies. Since you bave beell baving your SymptOIIIS year round, it is
likely that tbla is the awse of your
dry nose. Most lndlvidua:Is wbo
have tbla rondidon are allergic to
bouse dust, animal dander or feathers that may be in your pillow.
Sanetimes it is possible to get satisfacu.y relief by keeping pets out
of
the bedroom, keeping the bedSusie Mash and Barbara Walker
normal nasal secretions and is tben room meticulously cl11an (even
have
been named co-employees of
swallowed. While Ibis is problbly uDder the bed) and using synthetic
the
month
for October for the Trinot 1 problem for you because of pillows instead of feather or down
County
Community
Action Agency
· tbe small amount involved, olies. For otbera, specific treabnent
Head
Start
Programs.
petroleum jelly In the digestive sys- for allergies is needed to gain
Mash is a center based teacher
tem can reduce the nwnber of vita· reHef.
at
the Coolville Head Start in
mins that your body absorbs. How("FIIIIIily Medldae'' Is a week- CoolviUe. She bas been with Head
ever, for those tbal use mlnetal oil ly column. To aubmlt questions,
Start for two years. Before roming
- a similar type of petroleum write
to John C. Woir, D.O., to Heart Start, she was employed
U · a laxative on a frequent buls,
Ohio Univenlty Colleae of Osteo- for I0 years by the Meigs County
the risk is much grealtt.
palblc Medldne, Gl'OIVenor Hall, Mental Retardation/DevelopmenThe greatest risk from use of Adac-. Olalo 45701,)
tally Disabled Board working with
petroleum jelly in the nose romes
from inbaflng the material. Tbia
romD!OOiy DCCIIII when aslc:cp, 10
the person is unaware of it. The
lungs can't euily eliminate Ibis
foreign substance u the digestive
1n11:1 does. Instead, the longs react·
to it awsing seaning and pocwnonia-lite fluid accumulalioos.
Tbls lung damage usually
so sracJually that the indivl
doesn't relale the sympiOIDS
to the use of petroleum jelly in the
QOSe, c:bronic use of mineral oil for
constipation, or frequent CliJIOIIIIe
to the spray lubricants used on
machinery. Eventually, when
cbrooic sbor1Desa of brcalh dcvel·
Annual
ops almg with a cough, a chest X·
Percentage
ray wUI be done. While the lung
images may look abnormal, it is
Yield
usually necessary to obtain a sam-

....

told history of family business ·E

In the beginaing, tbe store averaged $8,000 in sales each week
while needing $15 00 to break
even, be said. A work week was SO
to 60 hours. Along with family
members, seven to 10 additional
employees were hired.
Today, Vaughan •s Cardinal
occupies a 21,000 square foot
buildinx. Tbe first remodeling wu
· completed in 1980 with a serond
addition built In 1983 In 1988
Vaughan 'a purcbued the formu
Ace llardware fadlity and a clllucb
and expanded into their present ·
size.
Vaughan said thai beginning the
business was a step out in faltb
"What bas made Vaugban'a'succcssful?" be ukcd. ~Hard wort.
Learning more about your busiDess
all the time. HirinJ people who
exemplify your pbilosoplly - llld
they must live and die by those
standanla. 1n tum, !bey are IIIX:Cpl•
ed into the family"
• Accept gro,;..th 85 a way of
life," be said. "There are 110 CllCUSes, we will grow."
~The business baa grown
because it responds 10 customer
needs by constantly anrveying the
clientele to determine their
desires," be said. "Mistakes have
been made, but our policies have
changed to meet our customer's
needs."
Club vice-president Lloyd
Blackwood gave an enRraved
plaque to Richard Vaughan in
recognition of the Rotary theme:
"Be A Friend." 1be plaque states,
"To someone wbo truly represents
the spirit of Rotary and is a living

Mash, Walker named
employees of the month
young children. sbe and her busband, Charles live in Pomeroy.
Tbey have six children and six
• grandchildren.
·
Barbara Walker is a center
based/home based teacher at the
new Heard Start Program located
in Amesville with the Federal
Hocking Preschool Program. She
has been employed at tbe Community Action for ten years, the first
five years with Day Care and the
last five years with Head StarL

.

•·

f...

1

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•
•
•
••
•
••
••
•
•

&amp;.

Dr. Gordon Amesbary of Gal~
Iipolis wu a guest of the club.
::::

Nora Jordan observes 93 rd b'rthd
I
ay ::~
..
The 93rd birthday of Nom Jor- tbi: church Dec. 15. There will be
dan was observed with ice cream

and cake when the Busy Bee Class
met recently at the MiddlePOrt First
BaplistCburcb.
.
Tbe group enjoyed a soup and
sandwich supper before the birth·
day observance. Hostesses were
Rosemary Lyons, Jerry Pullen, and
Betty Gilkey. The December meeting wiD be a Christmas potluck at

COUPON

Cheer

:Wesson Oil

PRESENTED PLAQUE- Rlcbard Va..... fll Va......'• :
Cardlnal-lupermarket In Middleport rec:eatiJ rmlnd 1 plaque ;:
from the Mlddleport-Poa.roy Rotary Cu In ......lluu of the r
Rotary theme: 'Be A Friend." Here, chab villi pwnldeat Lloyd J:
Blackwood makes the pnMDIDtloa.
[
example or tbe ··Be A Friend'
tbeme."

•••••••••••••••••••••
COUPON

:
•

dollar gift exchange.
Attending were Ruth
Mary Brewer, Marybetb
guest. Rosemary Lyons,
Slavin, Elizabeth Searles,
Evans, Freda Edwards, Mrs.
dan, Katberyn Metzger, .,~'"'.;..
Gilkey, Gwinnie White, and
Pullen.

S II

48 oz. Bottle

42 oz. Powder

Limit One With Coupon
and $10 Purchase

Limit One With Coppon
and $10 Purchase

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Red • Golden Delle••

Michigan

pples
31b.J

c

EMPLOYEES OF 11IE MONTH • Susie Mub, left, and Bar- r
. ban Walker •• been namec1 co-employee or tbe monlll by Trl·
County Commuaity Action Agency, Head Start PrOJI'IIDL
. .

Betty Crocker Cake Mixes
Buy One Get One

8 00

' FREE
Limit One Free With Coupon
" and $10 Purohase

..

Charmin

lie!:!:

6~0

There's nothing like the aroma
of fresh-baked bread to remind you
bow blab the stuff from the big
dough fOUDdries really is.

7

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Minimum Deposit $2,500.00

.,

0

1-4 Roll Pack

s

Annual
Percentage
Yield

8 Roll Pack

Minimu!D Deposit: $500.00

···These CDs are automatically renewable. Penalty for early withdrawal.
A.P.Y. is available as of the date of this issue, but is subject to change.

gg

No craft sinks more rapidly in
IUJIIIIY seas than atd•t!msbip.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
COUPON
:

What did they do with old magIZines before IOOICODC disa&gt;vered
the'- could be dumped in .the doc·

Heinz
.

1iQ1' I office1

Ware pi~

J(elchup

to announce our

spe&lt;ialists in obstetrics and gynecology.

s 99

Left to right are Jack Chan, D.O., Kenneth
Glinter, D.O. (Jl!IJted), Catherine Coats, D.O.,
and Jack Ramey, D.O. For more
information please call

It's Our Way of Saying Thank Youl

(61 4) 593-2398.

Stop in during business hours

40 oz~ BoHle

December 5th - 9th .•.

* Refreshments
* Register for daily give-a-ways and drawings
* See the ·oress-A-Cioll" entries on display

....·-·........................... .
Umlt One With Coupon
and $1 o Purchase

Your BankPt~···

••
•
••
•
••
•
••

• •••••••••••••••

COUPON

~ 2° Off
Christmas
,.rees
8

0

4 ft. and up bagged or
c~t with coupon and
•ao purchase

••••••••••••••••••••••

1.:1.
Farmers Bank ·
~
&amp;Savings Company ·

a.

....._

~

W&lt;UJL._

~

211 Weet Stcond StfHI

P.O. lor 626

~. Ott .071)9
61C.WZ·2136

Member F:o.I.C.

loute 7
P.O. lox Sl9
1""'*1 Ptaina. OH 4113

61&lt;1166H161

(it
I.OOER
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�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

..

Harold C. Will of Pomeroy and
Bob Fisher, riverboat man of
: Racine, keep me posted on what's
happening on tbe "river".
· They advise me that we'll be
. seeing a new boat pass by next
- summer and It should be a dandy.
: It's called the American Queen and
· is being built by lhe Delta Queen
Steamboat Co., which has also the
: Delta Queen and the Mississippi
· Queen. Its Inaugural cruises will
: take place in 1995.
The new boat received its 60-too
· paddle wheel recently at the
. McDermott Shipyard in Amelia,
: La The American Queen is sdled·
· uled to leave the shipyard at the
: end of Marcb, next
and is

in Pittsburgh, Pa., followed by a
16-nigbt trip recreating the voyase
of the nation's rust steamboat, the
New Orleans.
Billed as the largest steamboat
ever built, the Mississippi Queen Is
418 feet long with a 37.5 feet bull.
It bas a height of 54 feet and is six
decks high. Twin fluted stacks will
be 109 feet above the river level.
The pleasure boat tips the scales at
4,700 tons and will accommodate
420 passengers.
A lot of us will certainly look
forward 10 the American Queen's
passing by, won't we?!

Holiday seasou plans were made
when the Catholic Women's Club
met recently at Sacred Heart
Church.
The group will include tioancial
adoption of a child through the
Christian Foundation for Youth and

Aging. A thank you note from
Covenant House in New York City
was read acknowledging a gift of
blankets to the or~anization . The
annual CbrisbnaS dinner at Seyler's
House of Treasures was planned
and a report on the rea:ut bollday

bazaar was given.
The Rev. Dawn Spalding spoke
on a weekend of prayer which was
held at lhe Women's Correctional
Institute, Marysville, in wblcb she
and ber parents bad participated.
Women of Sacred Hean belJ]ed by

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt; Ohio

~·.

Holiqay activities planned by Catholic women

by Bob Hoeflich

If you're in beed offood for lbe
holiday season or know someone
. who is, then you'll be interested in
. knowing the Meigs United
. Methodist Cooperative Parish will
. be taking applications for food bas. kets on Dec. .5, 6 and 7 at the head- quarters, 311 Condor St., In
Pomeroy. The baskets are for low
· income people and the applicatioos
. will be taken from 9 a.m. 10 11:30
: a.m. on all three of the designated
. days.

Wednesday, No~inber 30; 1884

Poineroy-Midd!eport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend .. ;
I have some bad ocwa for you.
If you have enjoyed lbe beautiful Christmas holiday seasoo dec().
rations at the home 011 Walt Manley like I have every year you'll be
disappointed to learn that this year
the magnificent selting WOII'tllllllerialize.
Too bad. Walt was deep Into
planDing his display as far bade as
the Meigs County Fair in August
and probably even before that.
However, there is illness in his
. family and he will not be putting
· up all those lights. In case you
don ' t recall, the Manley display
. was the one on Route 681 just out
· of Tuppers Plains.
Maybe next year, Walt

'

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providing dozeDS Of cookies "tol"me'
event. The group con~lated die'
Rev. Ms. Spalding 1011
Wut 111111·
her presentalion and promised con;;
tlnued support in tbe prison mi.,.istry. ·

L. Wrlteeel
ROORNG

_
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnM~TES

If you were good enougb to loan
me music for tbe 1994 MeiJs
County Talent Showcase, nofto
worry. I do have it intact and will
et it hack to you in the near future.
appreciate your help. I have the
loaners listed as Catherine Sbene-

PLEDGES- M.nlyo Poallo, Kelly Tollla, ud M1q1e Blab,
left to rlglat, pleclpa of XI Gamma Mu Cllllpfer of lela Slama l'lll
Sorority, were bononcl at a nant prefenatlal tea hlil at tbe
home ot Llllda Bate., Pumeroy. Sheila H.uTII coadiiCfed tile ceremony with Maarlsba Nelson, vice president, -lltiDtl· Reltab·
meats were ~erved.

f

and I Jndyy C..-.

and again, thanks a lot.
Members of lbe WOIIICD's Aux·
lliary at Velietlllla Manorial HOipital ~gao the chore of puUing up
Chrislmas trees and other decora·
tiODJ about the boapital today. They
also are staging a door decorating
contest for the boapital as wen 11 a
special cootest In the lkllled Dun·
iog facility. The contesta wblcb
offer cash prize C~~CC~Un~e employees and others to brighten up the
hospital for lbe season 10 if, heaven
forbid, you have to be around the
hospital during the seasoo at least
there will be ·a bit of holiday itmospbere.

'!'be Board of Trustees of ~e
Ohto Valley Area Llbrar!es
(OVAL) .accc:pted the res!gnalion
o~ Cyn~lna ~trtle, E~tens1on Ser. vtce~ hbrar1an, ,dunng a rece~t
meeting at systems headquarters m
Wellston recently.
Pirtle _bas de.voted the last tw~
ye:u:s to IDlprovmg ~ooks By M,~I .
and bookmobile serv!ce~ 10 the c.JU·
zeus of the area with tnnovalive
approaches~ calalog production
and user servtCes. She has accepted

.

consulting and continuing educa- vlcies" prograin to adopt technology
lion services; and $37,562 In inter- ·to increase local service potential.
library loan services for a total of
OVAL Is the only state funded
$535,098 in products and services regional library system in Ohio. It
to the member libraries.
serves the c:ilizens and libraries of
. Tbe ~ beard a report from Athens, Hocking, Jackson,
Duector Eric S, Anderson concern- Lawrence Meigs Pite Ross
i~g revlsio~u to the 1995-96 Scioto, and Vinton' counties with
Library SCIVIces and Conslruction programs of services developed by
A~t (LSCA) Title I application
those libraries.
bem' developed by lhc Lilnrian's
Wanda Eblin serves on the
Adv_tso~y Commit~e. Tbe draft
OVALBoardasareprC&amp;cntativeof
application creates an u Access Ser- _tbe Meigs County Public Ubrary
, .
•

And don'tloot now, but it's
about time for you 10 start dragging
all of that Chrislmas "stuft" 0111 of
storag~ and moving the furniture
about to mate ~ for the tree. It
is a chore but look ar lbe lift these
decoratio{ls give everyone. It's
almost enough to make you keep

smiliDg.

the director's position witb the
Brownsville City Library in
BrownsvUie, Texas.
The 1994 OVAL Products and
Services report was acce~ by lhe
board. The report de~s. m &lt;~?liar
amounts, OVAL semces prov1ded
to each library. From July 1_993
through June 11194 OVAL JX'C?vided
$~98,087 In Boolcs By M~l ser·
v1ces; $88,608 in bookmobile ser·
vices; $57,232 in grants and m~cellaneous services; $53,609 10

0

.

Dear Ana Landers: I am a 38year:old. woman who. bas .been
!"IITied f~ 20 years ~ B~. Bob
IS 50 and IS DOW terminally ill.
_
Bob and I bave ~yed very close
!,D hts 1!0:-y~-old widowed mot_het
Mary ts fatrly .healthy. and hves
alone. For my enbre mamage,_Mary
has been one of ~Y best fnends.
~1te our age dtfl'erence, we do
thmgs togelher, such as sbo~ and go
10 the theater. Although we~ vel)'
close, I am glad that Mary lives .tn
ber own cozy home ralhcr lhan wtth
us.
Now that Bob has only a ~ew
months to 1 e Mary wants to move
.
IV •
!!'to our ho~ so she can spend more
bill~ With hun. Yesterday, ~he floated
tbeideathatwecou~conunuetotive
~ether after B~ dies.
.
I m really amblval~t abo_ut. this,
A I
1
1t
h
th
nn. wan my rea ~ons 1p WI
Miry to ~dose, but I m_not sure I

The band was chosen to represent the state of Florida for this
event Out of 300 applicalions that
the parade board reviews eacb year,
only 12 bands from 12 states are
chosen. The categories judge by the
parade committee are for the best
color guard, born line, over all
marching and maneuvering, and
tolal overall representation.

..

Townsend, Westerville, were
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Stanley.
Several members of the Har·
risonville Senior Citizens Club
enjoyed !heir Thanksgiving dinner
on Nov. 22 at Dales. Those attend·
ing were Faye Cotterill, Lollise
Eshelman, Buddy Edwards, Duane
and Hazel Stanley, Virginia Gibson, Edith Reiser, Margaret Dou·
glas, Ruth Lowe, Nellie Lowe, and
Lola Clark.

wantberliving~.Aiso,uoccurred
to !"e tha~ I might want to sta~t
daung agun ~ the _road ,_and tf
Mary moves ~~. a relauonshlp wtth

Center, Friday. Potluck at 4:30 followed by lighting of memorial
Christmas tree at 5:30, and pro·
gram by Big Bend Cloggers at 6:30
p.m.
RUil.AND - Rutland Township Trustees, regular meeting,
Thursday, 6:30 at Rutland F"II'C Sta·
tion. Scaled bids on truck to be
opened.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Organizational
meeting for Meigs Couuty Ecu·
mcnical Youtb Project, 311 Condor
St., P001eroy, 7 p.m. Public invited
to participate in the goal of povid·
ing a place for youtb outreach

wmt.

We're delighted with how Southeast Ohio has taken to dialing 10-ATT first
for 10% t~ll call sa~ings.w~thin ~e 614 area shaded on the map. So to keep
those sav~n~s commg, were gomg to extend the 10% offer through 1/31/95.
Keep dtaling 10-ATT first, and the savings will keep coming your way.
T~at's 10-ATT + 1 + the number as you usuallY do.
·
Wtth Al&amp;T there are no time restrictions, no gimmicks. No need to sign
up. No monthly fee. If you have any questions please give us a call at
1 800-2~2-4~12,_ ext. soq1o. It's all so simple. It's 10-AIT and 100/U savings.
AT&amp;T IS bnngmg quahty and savings even closer to home.

Insurance Work Welcome

JMI. S.JN

State Rt. 33

SAYRE TRUCKING

Dtwwln,Ohlo

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Adcltlona
-New GaragH
oEiectrleal &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
ofnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting elao concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

11/2Min

8

ROBm BISSELL
(ONSTRUOION

PubllcSaJe
&amp;Auction

V.Cf. YOUNG II
882-6216
Pomeroy,~=-

•N-Homu

The Syracuse
Volunteer Fire
D.P..rtmentls having
a Christmas Auclion
this Saturday, Dec. 3
althe Station,
1:00 p.m. with
refres.ments.
Everyone Welcome.

-Garages
oComplete

Remodeling ,

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

Stop &amp; Co~pare
FREE ESnMATES

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

915-4473
Public Nollce

Maplewood Lake

or December, 1994, at which
time aald account• will be
conaldered end continued
from dey to day until finally
___Pub.,;.,.;,l;;;lc;..Nol;.;,;;.;;;;lce:.;..._ dltpoHdof.
Any ptraona lnttreated
Eatate of Oliver E. Belloy, an moy flit wrltlon txceptlono
lo aald account• or lo
lncompetonl Person.
malttrt pertolnlng to the
ESTATE NO. 27885 • flrtl
Annutl Accounl of John C. · execution of the truet, not
Rico, Guordlt n ol tho Eotote loll than five doya prior to
of Glodya Rtevoo, on lhe dote 111 for httrlng.
Robert Buck, Judge
lncompetonl Ptrton.
Unlett oxcoptlont oro
Common Pllll Court,
Probolo Dlvlalon,
flied lhtroto, told occounto
. Molga County, Ohio
will bt for httrlng before
ttld Court on the 3oth dey (11) 30; 1TC

St. Rt. 124

112·70UO~

·-

.

..nu: Your 1hle Voice.'"

-..•
'""! ..

.-..

~·

--

.,
'S:M 10% on llUs of 525 ot les&amp; Coolpario;on to Ohio Heirs roll
schedule 8. Suhjea ro billin!! availabili!J&lt; No! avai.lable in Mr. llmln,
Fredericktown, D:mville, G:lmbier. Martirubu.g Ulial, Homer and
C&lt;nrerbul!l areas Promotion exrended lhrou8h J/31/\5

.,....

AlaT

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-~

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CI994AlllT

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•' • ' -"

• ·'

•

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o •r • '

.

Ann
l d
an ers
~':·s\:.=.

c'"""'' Syndicate·

invite her 10 live with you ·· even
temporarily. Too often, familiarity
~rcr.::ml;nders: There is a
certain person _ 111 call her "Debbie"
•• who used to he a friend but is now
a thorn in my side.
Debbie is very self-centered and
immature. She is also rather dense.
I've told her over and over that I don't
bave time to talk to her every day,
but she persists. Debbie calls
me constantly and at the most
inconvenient times. I have trouble
gettinghcrofl'thephone,and if I hang

bore millions of readers by repeating
Landers' Law of Survival for the
umpteenth time: No one can take
advantage Of you WithOUt your
permission. If Debbie continues to bi:
a telephone pest, say, "Sorry, I'm
running. I'll call you when I can."
Thenbangup,anddon'tcall berback.
Dear Ann Landers: I recently
underwent five hours of non-life
threatening plastic swgery. The next
day, I was told by a nurse that my
husband, who 1 thought was pacing
lhc hall outside the operating room,
bad left !he hospital to go to a movie.
I'm hun 10 think that he was out
enjoying himself while I was under
lhc knife for several hours. What do
you think about a husband who
would exhibit such insensitive
behavior? •. KENDALL PARK, NJ.
DEAR N.J.: Even ·non-life-threat·
ening surgery" has risks. It wouldn't
have killed your husband to have
bought a few magazines and stuck
around.Now,dear,kissandmakeup.
TM holidays a~t jil.sr aroiUid IM
cortll!r. AM Landers' new booklet, "A
Co/kerion of My Favorilt Gems of
rlre Day," is a perfocr srockillg sruffer.
To get a copy, setld a self-addl!sud,
long, bu.tifllSS·siu tflvtlope alld a
cMclc or IM""" oldtr ""r $5 (riW ill·-"
JU
cludts posrage Qlld ha11dliflg) to:
Collection, c/o Allfl Landers, P.O.
Bo:d/562, Chicago ,Ill. 6061l.:0562 .
(In Canada. setld $6.)

TOLL FREE 1-100441·0071
DARWIN, OHIO

BINGO
Racine American
Leglori Post 602
Now having Bingo
every Sunday Night
Stanlng 6:45 pm
Doora open 4:30pm
The more people
playing !he bigger
the pay-oft.
Save ad for 1 free card.
949-2038 or 949-2044

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
Starting Slug

Matches
Nov. 11
6:30
Sunday, Nov. 13
Friday,

1:00

'(

. I

FRESH CUT TREES AYAILAILE
OR CUT YOUR OWII

Craft Shop ·
'\
Located on Cherry Ridge: From R~.
, u East
Sat Darwin onto Rt. 681. Go 4 m·
erry
Ridge Rd, 1 1/2 miles to tr farm.

On4t.m11e out

WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am til dark Nov. 25 thru Dec: 24

Wa n rides Fri. Sat. Sun .

Tues. • Wed. • Fri. • Sat.
1-6

• Craftsman Tools
•Toys

Morrison's Heating &amp; Cooling

•Guns

Loeds of Mise.
Buy-Sell·Trade

Sales, Senice &amp; Installation
Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate - Financing Available
Call Today for Free .Estimate

992·2060 lONI mo.

WEill'S
CHIISTIW
1110

(614) 992·7434

..

AutJNrlld .Aiurfelialta..,.,. .O..In

RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 742-2143 or

_

·O&amp;E ELEC'I'RI~
OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.

7131111 TfN

Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

992·5251

Llgttt Hauling,

John

992-7162
W 171ttn

Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Doug

ANNOUNCEMENT
Now Accepting New Clients

Bill Slack
992·2269

DENISE l.BUNCE
AnORNEY AT LAW
105 Second St., Pomeroy, OH.
(above Bank One)
~.J..~ Tel. No. (614) 992·5730 ~.J..~
General Practice of Law including:
Divorces, Real Estate &amp; Business 1111111 mo.

m

lEST RECEPTION
For the best in sateUite
sales and service contact
Bryan or
Best Reception.
·We have even better
and quicker service.
- Over 10 yrs
experience
· Service on all system
types.
· Best prices all around
the area .
992-2903 or 992-6320

m_

MODERN SINrri,OI
POMEROY, OHIO

Septic tanka cleaned &amp; ponable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites ' Camp Sites • FamKy Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING

CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;
WREATHS
Ready Nov. 23
$10&amp; Up
Open 10 am-·-9pm _
lo• S11owclen's Lot
S.R. 124
Rutl•ntl, Ohio

ANN LA"'DERS.c 1~. CreiiiOtl ~te

major health problem by preventTbe Meigs County Unh was part of Ibis dynamic organizatiori."
The American Cancer Society is ing cancer, saving lives from canrecognized for excellence tn the
years overall Income ~uring ~e lbe nationwide, community-based cer, and diminishing suffering from
American Cancer Soc1ety Ob10 voluntary health organization dedi- cancer through research, education,
Division Inc.'s annual meeting of ~ated to eliminating cancer as a and service.
members beld in Columbus at tbe
Radisson Allport Hotel.
'!be award recognlic:d tbe Meigs .
Unit of the American Cancer Soci·
ety for providing funds . for
research, education, and services to
cancer patients in the Meigs Coun·
ty commuuity. The silver award
was presented by Shirley M. Gullo,
R.N., Board of-Trustees of the
Obio Division, 10 representatives of
the Meigs County UolL
Eleanor Thomas, Crusade co·
cbailperson s~ng on behalf of
the Meigs Umt said: "It was ~ $real
honor to earn tb1s prestigiOus
awanl. The volunteer and staff of
our unit work very hard for the
people in our area. and this recog~
nltlon Is a nice bonus to tbe satisfaction our work already gives us."
PRESENTED AWARD- Pat Boyv,executive cllrector.Melp
The Meigs County Unit's exec·
· utive director remarked. "Plans are County Unit, lcfl, aocl Eleanor TllomM, cnuade co-chalrperma.
underway to continue to e~pand -fer, accept the SUvtr Award from·S..rley M. Gullo, R.N., rep.
pur award-wioning programs w our reantJna tile Board of Tl'lllleel, Ohio Division American Cancer
community. It Is exc:ltlng being a Society;

..

143 from Rt. 7

CaU 949·2734
WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In CullOm
·
Fra~, .IJ!rtPalr
NEW l USED PARTS FOR
ALL IIAKES &amp; IIODELS

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BRADFORD'S

•

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

Racine, OH

Meigs unit recognized for excellence
. . ..

·

SATURDAY
RACINE - PoUuck dinner to
precede regular meeting of Racine
Grange, 6 p.m Saturday at the ·
Granae ball. C•med goodl to be
brought for Meigs Coop Pariah,
also fruit for besJrrU .
SUNDAY
POMEROY - A Christmu
cantata~ by Soc Mllbeoy, at
the MOUIIt HcrmoD U.B. Cburdl,
7:30 p.m. Slllldly. n11e "The Gift
or Cblillmaa." Public IDvlltd.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778111Cl Stir Jaolor Gnllge
878, regular SCIIicll Sllunlay, 7:30
p.m. at the Grange ball. BakinJ
contest to be held. Potluck refmb·
menta.

Free Estimates

~

711 South Third
Middleport
Hours: 10:00 A.M.
to 4:00 P.M. Deily

up,shccallsback every 15minutes.
Debbie showed up early in the
morning on my son's hectic first day
of school. She kept interrupting my
another man might be awkward.
morning preparation to tell me about
Part _of me says I should let Mary . her problems. Justas the school bus
!'love m, but another~ of me says was arriving, she said, "The bus can
11 could sow seeds of disaster. Wbat waiL Come look at my new cat"
should I do? •• PERPLEXED IN
Every time I hear her voice, I
THE MIDWEST
cringe. I need to get Debbie out of
One
1e .my life, but 1 don't know how to do
DEAR ~OWES~ e ~u!bat it I figured if anyone could help me
Mary m~ve m, the
are g
· : it would be you How about it, Ann?
she .Wt!!d~ unde~ your r~o - -- CAN'T BE RUDE ENOUGH IN
pennanen ~
.
My advice is to be attentive and NEW YORK
loving to the dear woman ' but don't
DEAR
· NEW YORK: I'm going to

:Co-mmunity calendar-

SYRACUSE - Industrial
: Auractiou worbbop set for tonight
: is canceled. Tbe meeting will be
. rescheduled at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 14 at
: Carletoo School.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
. Literary Club, 2 p.m. WedneSday,
: bolne of Mrs. Cbester Erwin. Mrs.
· Weudell Hoover will review Di/·
: ftrtnl Seaso11s and other writings
.: of Stephen King. Mrs. Erwin and
· Mrs. David Bowen will present
: mlmical selcctiODJ.
111UllSDAY
RACINE - A Chrislmas tea for
: volunteers at lhe Racine Elemeo. tary and tindergarten will be beld
at the blgb scboul cafeteria Thunday at 7 p.m. Children attending
with tbeir parents will be super. vUed IDd eatcrtained.
BRADFOitD- Tbe Meigs
· County WIIDCD'I Fellowsblp will
. ma:tll 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Bradford Clam of Christ
POMEROY ~ Potluck supper
IIIII cnteJ]ainmen.t. Sel!ior Citizens

..... .........

This woman is just plain dense

Harrisonville
news notes
'

· library.

lht Eotolt of William E.
Smith, DtctaHd.
ESTATE NO. 27870 • Flntl
and Dlotrlbutlvo Account ol
Jamu
0.
Pack,
Admlnlttrator of lht Eototo
of Mary Ann Korno,
Docoutd.
ESTATE NO. 27515 ·Final
and Dlotrlbullvo Accounl of
Paul K. Rote, Exocutor of
tho httlt of Georgie
Paulino Rou, aka Poullne
Roae, Docolltd.
ESTATE NO. 28401 • Final
and Dlalrlbuttvo Account of
William Pooler, Jr., Exoculor
of lho Eatote of Sharon Ann
Pooler, Dtctaltd.
ESTATE NO. 24905 • Nlnlh
Annual Account of Jennifer
L. Shoett Guardian of lhe

Rt~tlr

614-992-6223 ·

Chuck Stotts

·• ·-tt2-6&amp;U OR

years.

WEDNESDAY
. POMEROY - American Red
: Cross Bloodmobile, Wednesday, I
-to 5:30 p.m. at Senior Citizens
: Center, Pomeroy.
POMEROY Board of
: Trustees, Meigs County Public
Library, I p.m. Wednesday at the

Christmas Bazaar

NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
.
Account• ond vouchort
of lhl followi ng nemod
flduclorlll htvt boon flied
In the Probote Court, Melga
County, Ohio, for opproval
end Hllltmont:
ESTATE NO. 26647 • Flntl
ud Dlotrlbutlvo Account ol
Jon M. Loti, Executor of tho
Eatato of Mturlct Loll,
Dtctettd.
ESTATE NO. 28414 • Final
ond Dltlrlbullvt Account of
BtiVII K. Glut, Exocutrlx of

0 '

Chris Michael, son of loon and
Debbie Michael, Port Charlotte,
Fla., an&lt;! grandson of Estelle
Werry, Mason, W. Va., and Pete
and Jackie Michael, Bradbury, was
in the 180 piece Pride of Port Charlotte Marclllng Band pctforming In
the Macy's Thanksgiving Day
Parade in New York City.
A former student of both East·em and Wabama Higb Schools,
Chris bas been a member of the
Pride of Port Charlotte fcir only two

Nellie Lowe spent three weeks
visiting relatives in Arizona and
Las Vegas, Nev.
Overnight guests of Louise
: Esbelmaq and Buddy, were her
· daughter, Nancy Price, and l)er
: husband of Otway.
Anne Williams, a former resi. dent of the Harrisonville area now
: living in ~-cbigan, spent several
: days visi ing friends in Meigs
· County. S was accompanied by
· her son, Carl, and her two sisters.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin

J&amp;D FLEA
MARKET

The Midnight Cloggers will be
conducting a beginners
dogging class at Pomeroy
Village Hall, for 8 weeks,
Monday, Dec. 5, 6·7:30,
with $2 donation.

Michael takes
part in parade

t.:HRIS MICHAEL

Friday, December 2
BA.M.-5 P.M.

Saturday, Dec. 3 at the home
of Geraldine Cleland, East
Main St., Racine, Oh .
10:00 AM-5:00 PM

~~~t~~rf.i~:a:l~~: OVAL board accept~ librarian's resignation

Aatt ltlf

IIDWOPIII

Carpenter's Hall, Main Street

STUDENT COUNCIL - Tile T11ppen 1'181111 llt-lllary
Scllool hu elected a 1tudent coudL \\ey are pklllnd left to
right, front, Ashley Boylel, Tyler !5!mno.}m, Bndley BraiJnan, Yla
praldel!t; Cbrll Ly0111, Carrie Wlalna. tec:nlary, ud Mlcllelle
Tbllllllli; aocl back row, BIDie Jo wei... Kllllberly Ptfardnko, Joe
Brown, Gary VIerling, Dean AleDDder, pnddent, Bedl ~·.......

C.11~ltte

·PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Umestone
&amp; Gravel

614·742·2131

9.49-2168
Enterprise United
Methodist Church Bazaar

Oat Itt~

HAULING

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal

UNDA'S
PAINnNG &amp; CO.

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Llconotd • B dtd 20

laterior I
Exterior
T• the (Min out o1

992·3954
Emergency Phone 985-3118

(NIIntlng. Let • do II lor
you.- Vwy _.IL -

614·742·3051

-

-

F,.e Eetlmetae

a.lore 6 p.m. laave

m••••ue.

., t 1185-4180-

IISSELliUILDEIS, INC.

FREE ESTIMATES
614-992~7643
(No Sunday Calls)

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

1

614-843-5264

1

. ~,~

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire

~=H:ea:lt:h:•A:c:c:id:en:t:'A:n:n:u:ity:·:IRA=:':M:o:rtg:a:ge=~ .·

.lldrYWIIMWRiii*l

.

.Custom llade
o Solid 'lnyl

•

replacement
windows
•
•
i Frt,t Estlmatea .
• $200 Installed
Call For betalla

1

Kenny's Auio Rental
lenny's is the place to come
whe• you 'need a car rental.
Kenny's Auto center
284 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

.,

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL "

Alter a p.m.

Graded Benefit Whole Life is now available The
plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 with no
physical exam and no health questions asked on
the application. Ages 40-80

We ltave CarJ

1•

••tl V•••l

•VJSn'OUR SHOWROOM'
110 Court SL PoiM:-oy, OhiO · -

~lor. tlle Red fiiifWhlteAwnllll"
992-4119AI~e&gt;w*l.-291-S600 ·

1-800-486-1590

Bus. (614) 446-9971

.

~

'

�.November

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1994

Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER
Ann ouncP mr 11 ts

BEATTIE BLVD. Tt.t

Bruce Beattie

by

0

• •
0

•

•'

•

.

'

Bed-ra,l~~

0

potaol. - lllgll E
naoa, Air. ~IDiolug,

--.-.

tum on ....,.. Ad., -

No

Hunll!'l w , . . _ ... . II
onytl- 111,- D. .....IL
NO lwnllna or t n - .... 11

211&lt;. traitor, tnltar tat for
.....,.~. doDoalt, Rt,.
82 nonh. LDoull Rd. on rlgllt.

.,rt'- on'l:lwtoe-....,.,
Cleenlunlloly,

-

30U71-1071.

o-t

PrarnTing
-

......

........._

Cnow-

304-e7W404.

lloblto -

Giveaway

300/mo"

111124187.

Busi1181JS
Opportunity

.....

Dachlhuncl I YaarOid FulChllchn, -

.......... W/otiiiDft to

Zenith tiDor .-r TV a -...
mlcrCMave, 114-1112-'1111.

~ntoa

:c..

- · · ,_'J'Mo

a a Car
wa
01

44

vJclftlty, call to D, f14.m-1110.
Loolo- IWhla CMUt

--··

~~~i::-~

LAII: B....., CUehlon To A

Coucll AIIIIIVX. 3d 'o tt 01 1111
I l l • - Tha I lito llarllar Eaol

121
.,..._ -

GEl' STARTED WITH US-4111
. . ,...
...-r .....,. rr ' .... un- l l l i , d a r - l n Rio Orondo,
Hlndorwon .,.._
:104011 to ~ ··~•I'll •
8~ .
pi t'a• tar fUll and
lme
. Only
Small Poe Pig On j&gt;aaiiJone on al
~w Dotva, Naar IUD
hiiiNJ
taom p1ayon
oNnc~e, IM-248aso
apply, In-liD- lralilfr!g
~ . . ftO
li
&amp;.oM: .,..,., lh I fl II

=--lltot:.::-••-=--•lid

ott

-~

-

8

Aut-. rata InIn 10 .,._ Very paid -ion jl!ln...onn for

=:1:-.::Lc::::...=

-ton

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
..-,

• •Cllllo I 77s.1711.

U11 -

&amp;.~.

o::ll~:' .~

o1
pick up aa application.

LPN To Ia Cuatomor Sorvloo

Rep,....atlva. Ae1pocwlbllhM

WOuld Atoo lnotudo Some Homo
Vlala And With Qvalby
~ Houno: 11-f 1:30 -11:00.

AI " - 2 y..,. ExPOI'Ionce
.....ad. ~ Cornman-

With ~- EOE.
Or Hand Dollvor Raaumo
Too laMa AI a_,•o
lluor
• llaolloal Sulltlfy, 70
, , . ..- . Qalllpolla, 011 451131.
-

~ , -

to advertise 'any prelerence.
limitation or discrimination

based on oace, color, ,.llgion,
sex fam!lial status or nallonal
o·rigln, or any Intention to

make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.•

This newspaper will nol
knowllngly accept
advertisements for real estate
·which Is In violation ot lhe law.
Our readers are hereby

lnlorrned !hal all dWellngs
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

-

Llvtntl -St..

--;,r·d
•
00: ·
llangaa

•

taoo.
-ltu
--_ 4x411ont
1111 Ful
.,

· -........... lor aala,
114-1011-'1141.

FJrwood, mixed, a ned
. . . . - , 114 ton full toao1a
-a-.MO,IM-

ST

ftllslcal
Instruments

Houno lion. ·Sol.... Wed....;
Don, Forgol Our REPO. -

!!:: ...
-."*'~ Whlitaod- ,._.
........ - . ... "'""" :tf ~ ... ~
441-4411Aiar7P.II.

Ava, OaltiiiOfla, SUOotlo. Pfua 11anaa ••: Qaa 11anaa 10 Ututttoe, Aelonl- Raqulraol. tt14f, 1&lt;-. Portalilo Waoohao
114 t41 4tt1Aftw1P.II.
1110; AM'IIgwilloi FI'OIII f,_11

BEAlmFUL APAIITIIEiml AT CU. Fl .,.,.A.a.~"­
BUDQET PRICES AT ~ACKQI ~ ....,:,,:Y.=v::
ESTATES. a - . Ptu
tromNaato.._WolltolhDD ran~W1201; AI
• Cal t1• Ul"lll&amp;. ~
~
EOH.
nN, Or~COUntry lido....,._,., 2 Baolrooma, W~ ~ lloakJip.
CA. $340/llo. 1
Rliilunil. 52 Sporting Goods
~....,_2P.II.II

P.ll.

. 317 IIAGIIUII CHROME 1400,
11t 1111111.
Fumtohld I " - I lath,
Ctoan, No, Pole, Ra1araoa a Colt AR-11 1H1ao dllo t r ' Dapoatt llaqullwd.l14-44t-1!11. . . - a old,. ollpo. :104-711AN.

- a .........._

·

'10,000

lltloo, Air, Cndaa, 'Ill!. 4 ~ .
Chah
Anti
- . Oood
Con . . .
. . .llonalo
... ~
~10 ~

Dutr _..., •

-

tiNa,..._~

aC!Dtl

FIRANK &amp; ERNEST

ro
/
5U,(,E5J'

JOAD

'l&gt;
· '-----~
'7-: . .

Farm Supplte s
&amp; Ltvestock

aftor

:

LAWN IIIOWEII
t2 W Cut LAWNCHlEF
1400 080, 114 210 1:111.

.

.

•
·.--·.

.,

\_\

..

B.ORNLOSER

v

\o&amp;, ~. IT~ llW.\ 1'1 YEH.
51 ~ lt:&gt;f'l l£FT YOO ...
~ cOO'r YOO MJ":61\ER.-;

Ill

m

,

~

\oJI\e.IE.V£r&lt;: I DO, I

Flannery O'Connor, the American auwrote, "Time is very dangerous
without a ·rigid routine. If you do the
same thing every day at the same time
for the same length of time, you'll save
yourself from many a sink. Routine is a
. condition of survival."
Bridge experts routinely watch for the
right time to win a trick. In today's deal,
from the last World Championships,
Linda Lewis, of Las Vegas, found the
right moment for the key play and beat
a contract that would otherwise have
made.
South's one-club opening was strong
and a·rtiricial. North's one-heart re sponse showed at least seven high-card
points, but denied an ace and a king or
three kings.
West led the club 10. showing zero or
two higher honors. After winning with
dummy's queen, the declarer,
Dutchman Max Rebattu, was faced with
a tricky decision . He could take the
~l!i!~~ fi.n~~~~. hoping ~~t had queen·
third. Yet that was heavily against the
odds. Or he could try to sneak a heart
past East. Rebattu went for this option,
calling for dummy's heart two .
If East plays low, West does best to
duck South's jack. But South overtakes
a diamond honor with dummy's ace,
takes the spade finesse and concedes
the fourth round of spades to East's
queen. South's nine tricks are four
spadea, one heart, two diamonds and
two clubs.
East was on the ball, however. She
put in her heart king. When it held the
trick, East returned a club. West's suit
was established while he still had an entry in the heart ace . The contract was
routinely dead. .

eomputer

Phillip Alder 's new book, "Get

.L...

Smarter at Bridge," is available,

·
- . .......nt-1n-11112.
.. ~
......... -

autographed upon request, .for
$14.95 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn
His., NY 11577.0169.

Llvtntl "-" ......... 114-

117N120 AFTER I P.ll.
.:-.v Oroln, Elaotrto, EIICialtont Condllori $lUG ~
2720 AFTER I P.ll. '

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campos
c.briry Cipher cryptopms . . CtMted from~ by f.oous J*IPII, put and present
Each~ in the cipher Sl.lndlllor ~- Todly'l cbt: P 1JQU111s M

OTXK

AI

LK

CA

RCOO . ' -

.., _ _

...

,,...

TV

AI
YILKYR

PTRDIIZP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "To be seventy years young is sometimes tar more
Cheerful and hOpelullhan to be forty years old.' - Oliver W. Holmes.
0 11KM bV NEA, Inc.

30

~~~====­

S© l'Qll

- - - - - lolltH . , .

lanors ol
0 Raorronga
four ocramblad words

I

tho

be-

low to form four WOf'ds.

I

WOLLSY

II

j.C r I

A IN

.

o c_u....c_,...-1, :..',
1.........
111

..,-H....
.
s
1 --1.-.l.--l'---.l..__. ..

My sister is very selfish.
Granny always told her that if
you think the world owes you
..--:-=--c"...,..,-=---:---, a living you'll find it a hard
POLYED
ldebtto ........
L..

I

.

.

•

•

Mercllandl18

r

I I II I t I I

WHAT IS IT WITH

A -UNSCIAMetf lETTERS TO
V GU ANSWER .
•

CELEBRtnES &gt; toiT THEY

32 Mobile Homes

Comple•e tho chuckle quoted
bv f• lhng in the miu.ng words
you develop f rom step No. 3 below.

NUMBfRfD lETTERS
• . PIINT
IN THESE SQUARES
_

BIG NATE
KIO.I THE MEANING Of

for sale

TRUE

L.OIE' HONESTY'

C0t1t11T11ENT?

1818 Clayton Tnltor. 2 lodi'OOIII,
I 112 llltha. 14124. Room
Addblon. Situated ... .1 112
Ac- Laton, _ 011. Elloattont

Rafrlgant- ....... . Waahara
~ 1hYeN. All A•aancltloniCI
And -rtoodt ttoo And Up,

COndftton, Uoa 3813 Evonlngo.

WIU Dlllvor. - - ·

114-W

.,. 4411321

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

~~.~300Rentals

ROBOTMAN

1177 Doclgo :100 Tndaarnan """ •.

.,_...

-lnocl, aC!Dtl
~· Mil
30WlWiml
attor "·

11'11 24 Ft Ctaae A llotor Homo, .
On Dodoa Qoaaala, Roof, Air,
Fulv lall Contalnadii[vao ytlllng

wcn.,$UOO.I141- an.
~~

Servtces
1111 SB llonte
Corio=-~
tualllltoa,
All A
v - :;.--i
ti04Fon1Conv.....,VanCondition, Aaldroa: 11,100. Allor
IP.II.IIWI'H4111.

Rood, $14,000,114-31l-7111.
Sonic Valley, Appta Orova,
beautiful :lao. IDle, good rood,
~- Clydo-. .....

To aaltto aolola al Lovom lionto&amp; M .... on s- At. :ss, Lol

11 •29·9~

Appeal- Stoic • Annoy· United • CAN SPEND
"They are so successful, • my.friend observed of our
new neighbors. "I think really successful people make
more monev than their children CAN SPEND!'

1104 Pontiac 1000 IIW tt,200
Colt IM-44t-'IOOtl, Allor 8 Ciiil

IJTORAQE TANKS UOO llallon
Ull'fllhl, Ron Evana Enla......._
Jric-.,Ohlo, 1~ .

~""&amp;-;:~:o.:e.:

JID'aAu1o ...... ond ......

CD .RIY

VDIIIIO

RI

JITAJ

OKCY. A

L K

I......L-J.........L_J..........L......J

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

=·.. - .

RI

'AYCTATAJ

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

• Bonded,

Tn-IMllor

6 Flloment
7 Beaebell
player Mela Treoh

1--.,~6..-.-1-'"17.-1.--"T"-1 Q

54 Miscellaneous

O!Jportunlly basis..

New
1_1nctudaa
lng, 1111
.._ 14xJ!1
_
. , 1 lldrt,..,
hom10..,.,. lnlurlnDI. ll'icll I
FREE lot lliill. Only
h20 dawn and $114 par mo.
Colt 1-100-137-3231.

lluylng

S:UOO.IOWU Nl.

~LIM llklll', ~ ~
Paint, 'H, 4 ~....
Truoll. tz.tOO. 11---IT.I Or
11412111211.
.

hth. .,. 241 ....

Ajlpl!-::r.&amp;:: uu .....

New tggs Redmon 14114, 2'11ed·
room, Totll Eloctrle, u.,.ctorplnnlng. llaacly To Into On
Corilor Lol Pn Lana llablto
Court. Phone 114 ttl IIGI, 114441-778t

tnd8.

Pane, Paint, 302. Auto,
· - Calla Only, ..... 11424~-G~tt~
,1817
Vopaa~ UL
AC. .ul0"11 ...... Ul, AIM=tl
- . . . - ctoan, ..... oond., .

Pfllm•'*'

Dry•, woot. ClrOIIt S300 For

Qrandtolhar . - . llaaM

I MlJ5T 8E OUT OF M'&lt;
MtND .. AFTER THE FIFTH
ROOT BEER, I REENLISTED!

...... c.JI, lcyl., 3apd.,

lllnattoa • $1411.00;

catii14411N711. EDH. ·
lion.
Fumflllaol Elllolanay 111M1o. I:::::::,.......,.....,-,-~,.,.--..,.­
UtAfttoa Paid, Bath. m IVNrtpolot w- w. 1128
Fourtll A - oa•lpollo, 114;_~f~"'!!!'

All real estate advertising In

VITATAIB. Dalcloua ....,..,.

.....u-..... .........

ZIG.

lona avalflbto
roomllloltlt~-··­
,_, A--1 or

lhls n o - r Is sub)8cllo
1M Federal Fair Housing Acl
of 1968 which makes II Illegal

73 Vena &amp; 4 WD's

tf8110UdCIIII14 3111120.

Q.E. ....,

, OF ACTION ON TI-lE WESTER!HRONT?

. . . . . . your cloa .... hlo
-Alii Ad
and
114112
2ttllFildabout
JACK TCNEKDTE OR

Ala• DOd fOf' ..... free
Dlllvery, 140 A TNoll Lold, 140

181.110;

(at.)

5 ArouNd

.i.io

Vlrglnll. :104-

- - CcL Olear L Clcll,
to4111MIO

r-----------------~
'(OlJ LOOK TIRED .. WA5 THERE A LOT

eondll:lcin,.-

ln liMn.
at: Ylllaaa

.... grltloooll

or-•--..

.

PEANUTS

l;;.:c~Lii;,ltiii=.:,'S:-:FIJ:-:R:::NITU=RE=-­
CnJI to homa tumiiil--ililln
..

2bclnn........ IGiat - . .... ...
.,.
.. _
lltmlahod, fou!ldrY ~
•
'Nuliin IIJowaN

.

111111 ..... ........
"-L -..-.Cal
Chrla, . . . . . .
,..__._,l_pm.

p.m. s.turday.

GO CHECK
ON TATER
FER ME

.
UDIIIInl
. _ Qanla !lraan - at a.
·
tona I -altar :00, 114-1112-

For aato I n - Havan,- badroom houaa.coU 114-112-1212 or

4 Cruel peroon

GOODY I!

•aiMO.

IM!~r.IM-44~

56lllddly
57 Econ. fndk:alor
17 Tiny
56 Olmlnuttve
18 Archltact
aufflx
20Common
5I IIIICI expletive
allrnonta
60Ful plana
22 Wrltar· (abbr.)
Fiemlng
23 s - t pollto 61 !low
82 Lalra
24 Balwry
producto
DOWN
27 Dnlrlng (of.)
31Po.....
32 At the drop ol
I - In Ctnclnnetl
2Greet
34Actor3 Glrl'o name

Merchandlae

~~ .~r:4~'=' ~
1004-.

._,..
Quo!ll!y Hot••- ,_,.,,..
And Ajlpltanoaa.llaU-Iatii.

9K43

54-Dlnaun: Out
of Africa author ·

good hand is
to find

54 Miscellaneous

~.~ ......,.._

YI'RA FURNITURE
4111aa Out At. 141

A95

lead:

Household

5I

Apartment
torRent

4 l•dl oon•, 2 Full ....., 10
...... lam, Storage~
Racc0&lt;01 c:r.ak Fl!lflltiiO,
Located Right ott 211. CJil.
Rpotll. R - To: 141,000 Or

Found: amatl ..._, ond whHa
doa. LltUo - . , . . SR 124

Adva-. DEADIJNE: 2:GO p.no.
thldaytoa.... lhled ..........
Sunday edMion • 2:00 p.nt.
Fnday. llonday aolllon • 2:00

1---------

EAST
6QI073

Bobby-

••

I'M HOME
FROM SCHOOL,
AUNT
LOWEEZY

r.1erchandlse -

16-and kln

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
West North Easl
Pass 1 •
Pass
I.
Pass 2 t
Pass
3NT
Pass Pass , ,pass

BARNEY

For
114-

=:~!If- -. 112,000,

~::..=~~~=
Up
Truck. "1147441 22'2

ALL Yard latoa 111uo1 Ia Palclln

="&amp;

Call . , . _ _

I Bedrooma, 2 lllhe, Pump, Qaa Fu,..ca, 1 Acre,

Found: Urge Ring With o12

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

-

......, ......,N.~
~ oul Butavltlo Rd.

Rio Gnncla, 114-37NI:If tJ.F.
TEA I P.ll.

Yard Slle

buy

wv

1 B•*oam oarall!l, ~ Bale 1n

Lost&amp; Found

7

cr:

2 ... ,...... 1 J!tll
2mt. out of- Ha-. llflolilll
123,1100. Lllllng 11122. .

ma•,3........,11t -.a.tOI

-1

24x40 ...,_

241 ill I lvonlnga.

•Q 7

'

1240-

IYittobto;114-112-7m.
Two ..... _-"'~
='-=IT~ and

31 Homes for sale

Pup.._ ... . . . . . , . . . , . _
Roltlo- Lib and c:11N. 4

LAII: Hubcap It Found Will Ia GlvH, Vlolnlty:
Haar Plzal Hut, Qaltljoolle, 114441.01122.

ltttWIIIO.
•• ~Ina room. with oooldna.
Atoo tnillar _ - on rtnr. All
-~-c;.a- a:oo p.m.,

Poa•••e.;,r..::
-- --::::--..:=-

~

Real Estcte
-.

Bound "' Qaltlpotla,
Ranrdll14-441-1312.

- f o r - --or-.

ltaoa.. II . - , Claltla llolll.

INOIICEI
11oma1n
Goods
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISJIIHQ .CO. ThNI
_ _. . ,... do buoj. Ponwoy, I tutt ............ gar: I,.-.,.,.~..,.,..,....,...,.,..,....,..
CooiiOII vtnrt In ltook ..... 1111
, _ wfth people
ond don lull, , _ •rpot,
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gift Send tor your Astro-Graph predic- 1tor yourself.
lions tor lhe year ahead by ma11ing $1 .25 · GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Yesterday
10 Astro-Graph, c/o lhis newspaper, P.O. you may have been more contodent than
Box 4465 New Vorl&lt;. NY J0163. Be sure you are today. Keep th1s on"mond ~you
lo stale ~ur zodiac sign.
·
wrestle with your ideas. Think pos~ively
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. It) You CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) It you ~re
could be lucky loday if teamed up with feeling rich today, ~ might jusl be an tllu·
others who maintain high slaodards. sion. Avoid stores that carry friVolous,
conversely, Ihe opposite could be true W expensive merchandise .
. you're a pooo judge ol character.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Sal-doubt could
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) When : decrease your chances of achMlVlng any·
making important decisions lo.day, use lhing valuable t~y . Be optimistic ·and
logic and unbiased lntormatton as a Hexible on case opportunoly knoc:l&lt;a. .
guide. Rose colored glasses distort reali· 1 VIRGO (Aug. 2:S-S.pt. 22) You, moght
ty.
contuse your supporters of you re lex
PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) The only aboul details today : Unless. you
thing stopping you today is your own apa- being more ap~clflc , they moght
thy. 11 you can get pasllhat, you might be your plea lor 8SiiatanC8.
in lor a very plea!18nl surprise.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Do not
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll It) You will be someone elsa to control your firnonc&lt;11i
lucky today, bul only in your own con- today. This COUld be crtticll.
cems. interact with others, bul lei them SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In the
maintain control over their own est ol security , keep your aucceu
resources.
yourself today. A jHiouo Hot-•
TAURUS (April 20-MIIy 20) Do not bank try to undermine 01 reverse your
too heavily on the advice of others today. fo'rnme.
You might be beHer off figuring things out .
011111 NEWJIPAPEili:N'I1!IIPIII.SASlill.

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EVIIW!qln ltrt~t

Thursday, Dec .. 1, 1994

,.
I

In the year ahead , your good luck will
pr9bebly come In a streak. Keep lhis in
mind when fortuitous thingS start to hap·
pan.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dac . 21)
Usually you're an adventurous person,
but today you might feel intimidated by
the 1cope of a plan. You may look for
'reaicin"s to evade It inlteid of aHampt it.
· Saglnarlus, treal yourself lo a birthday

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Access gives Gallia
nod·for regional jail
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentbael News Staff
WEUS10N - Gai1ia County
got the nod for a proposed rel!ional
jail over Meigs and Jackson counties at a meeting of the Southeast
Ohio Corrections Commission
Wednesday.
After eliminatiog a proposed
site at the Sara James Industrial
l'ait in JBCtson, oommlsslon members were presented 'with two sites:
ooe oear Salem Center in Meigs
County, the other near the Gallia
County Children•s Home on State
Route 160 nonb of U.S. 3S. ·
Consultants Michael Fagan and
.WiiUam Steinmetz of M.S. Consul. tants, Inc. of Youngstown
explained the pros and coos of the
.GaJ1ia and Mei11s sites.
Fag111 desaibed the Meigs si~
as "somewhat remote" and said the.
Gallia site offers better access. In
addilioo, estahlisbing utilities at lbe
Gallia site would cost $250,000 in
comparisoo to SSOO,OOO at the
Meigs site, costs tbat would be paid
by a state grant.
Also. instaWng emergeocy elec-

:z.:::l(GE·ABATE .
New.SIIIft
Sometimes bagstns your first
bui:k Is JQuch more than a rite ot
passase, esPec:ially wben it coiocldes with a l'ifst-ever, father-son
bunt
.
. But, J.T. White didn't even
lmow if his father would be alive
Ibis year.
Last year, J.T.'s father was
• stricken with kindey cancer, said
Dove, J.T.'s mother. One lddney
was removed and he had to go
through intensive chemotherapy.
Only 80 percent of the otber ~ey
remains, sbe said.
J.T. was upset because they had
made plans all year for bis first
year of buntins. He did bunt one
day witb a man from cburcb but
saw notbing, she said.
"He was so diS&amp;RJOinted. That's
all be tallced about for six months,"
Mrs. White said
J.T. was blue for the rest of the
winter, espeeially while bis father
struggled to improve.
Recent reports have improved
for tbe elder Wbite and tbe pair
began planning six mooths ago for ·
their font bunt together, she added.

~·lk

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J.T. WlDTE
A week ago, the Whites asked ~ir
son wbat be wantfd for Cbrisbllas
and be told them a new gun.
Last Friday, when be came
bome from basketball practice ·the
Eastern eighth grader told bis
father be wa• goiBg to set up the

•By GEORGE ABATE
Conservancy Districi, to remain
Sentbael Newill Slllft
confined on bouse arrest in Obio
A five-year judicial~ordeal ~ until jail faatitics can be found for
involvinB Jack Crisp bas dramati· his 1g-mooth sentence.
ca!JY shifted tow~ a conclus!on
Within a month, Crisp will lie
tb1s week, accordmg to Me1gs sent to jail wbetber a prison wants
County Prosec:utor 1o1m R. Lcntes.· him or bas the capability to bouse
Visiting Motsan Co~ty Judge bim, Lentes said. In February,
Dan Favreau onlered Crisp, the for- Crisp was sentenced to 18 months
mer director of the Leading Creek in jail for five misdemeanor counts

POUND BOX

~OFT &amp; GENTLE BATHROOM

ttical generators would be cbeaper
at tbe Gallia site since it bas access
to natural gas, be said.
. Concerning operatiug costs, the
two estimated that operating costs
for a 100-bed facility would be
around $1 million a year, witb eacb
county paying a percentage based
on the number of prisoners.
For a 100-bed jail, GaUia County would pay the most, approximately $360,000, while Jackson,
Meigs and Vinton counties would
pay about $287,000, $232,000 and
$116,000, respectively.
Fagan said operating costs at the
Gallia site would probably be
lower, although utility costs bad
not been detennined for either site.
Tbe consultantS suggested the
commission consider the two sites
and decide on a primary and alternate site at next Wednesday's
meeting, but Meigs County Commoo Pleas Judge Fred w. Crow m
and Meigs Sheriff James M. Souls•
by urged members of the commission to go ahead and vote on the
two sites.
"What will we kllow next week

that we don't already know?"
asked Crow, wbo added that some
members of the commission may
not be able to attend next week's
meeting.
·
Tbe vote was conducted by
secret ballot, with Gallia County
getting six votes to Meigs County's
four. Afterwards, the commission
voted unanimously to submit a
grant application naming the GaWa
County localioo as the priuwy site.
"We're pleased our site was
chosen fust," said Gallia County
Commissioner Ken Farmer, representing the Gallia commission on
the jail committee.
Farmer commended all members of the commission. "We bope
the four county district is chosen
for a grant, be aaid "We're apsnciative that the total board saw fit
to choose the Gallia site ...
Meigs County Commission
President Fred Hofflllan, representin!! tbe Mei11s County Board of
Commissioners, wasn't so pleased.
"!.don't understand why Jackson and especially Vinton (counties) would be in favor of the Gallia
M

COUNTING BALLOTS - Consultant
Michael Faaan of M.S. Consullanb counb
&amp;ecret ballots approving GaiDa County as the
primary lite of a pl'OJIORCI reglon.l jaiL Gaiiia

sire due to distance. My understanding, tbat everytbing else being
equal, the logical choice would be
the most centralized site - wbicb
is Meigs," be said. ·

won the YOte 6-4 onr Meta• County. Afterwarda, -mbcn of the co••1l d on
approved the Gallla eo.nty life:

"An analysis of ac1Ual opelaling
costs at botb sites has not been
made. As far as I can see, these
would be approxinlately the same:
estimated operatin~ figures were

target and sishtJn the ~· But,
bis father pulled the new weapon
from behind his back offering it to
bim.
.
"It just really turns Die inside
out because his Dad could bave not
been bere," sbe said. "You don't
know from one year to the next
wbetber you 'II be bere. You just
bave to tate care of every minute."
J.T. sllot the 10.point175-pound
buck once Monday in the leg, the
buck turned away and then charged
at hiin.
• All I saw was horns wben it
~e over the bill. I thousht I betler shoot bim before be gets me,"
White said. "It scared me to death."
The 13-year-old was just about
to go to luocb after sitting in the
FIRST DEER- Thlrteen-year-dd Erron Aldridge, son of eon.
stand tbrougb cold sleet since 6:30
n1e and DaiUI Aldrldae of Mlaen\'llle, bagged his ftnt~ver deer
that moming - but as be started 10
Monday ltiOI'IIIng from a two-penon deer stand he and bJs father
leave the bud walked over the hiU.
ftnhbed building Sunday night. The buck had apparendy lost one
Three shots later, Wbi te bad
of Its anden pricJr to thill -k's deer gun season.
bagged bis first buck - one 10
remember.
"He just came flying off the hiU. many reasons for the annual trek and the sheer isolation from the
His eyes were as big as quarters," into the woods, braving bad weath· daily grind.
About six Wood County,
er.
said bis motber.
Some enjoy the thrill and cbal- W.Va. residents travel each year to
The falher-soo pair will return to
leoge of lbe bunt, while others seek Baum Lumber in Chester. Ohio
the woods Saturday to bunt again.
(Continued onl'llge 3)
Area bunters said tbey have the j:lllllllladeri of a hiDiting partY

•-••••llllly

between $6,000 aild $8,000 per
bed. figures which I assume were
anived at film other fBCilities," be
added .
(Continued
011 hge 3)
,,

Hunter dead
of apparent
natural cause
A 62-year-old Rutland man
apparently died of natural causes
Wednesday after qging a deer
be Lad recenUy ldlled.
Clifford "Bo" Whittington had
been deer huntin11, shot a deer and
moved it part of lbe way toWII'd his
New Lima Road residence, accord·
ing to a report from Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
He then went to his bouse and
got bis pickup truck to move the
deer, be said. The truck was found
around 4 p.m. in a creet running
tbrougb his pasture,
Deputies reported Whittington
was driving up a bill wbeo the
vehicle suddenly veered to the ripl
and traveled about 100 feet before
coming to rest in the creek.
Rutland units of the Meii!S
County Emergency Medical Service responded to tbe scene and
transported the body to Birl:hfield
Funeral Home in Rutland, Soulsby
said.

Coroner Douglas Hunter reponed tbat an autopsy would be per.
formed to detemine the cause of
deaiiL

Prosecutor vows ex-LCCD director will serve prison sentence

VALLEY BELL

SWISS MISS

2 Sectione, 16 Pagn 35 centa ·
A Multlmedle Inc. Newsi)lpel'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 1, 1994

·special meaning surrounds
father-son deer ·ex
ition

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O~oLotterj

Q

ofreceiving improper compensa- trol and not my concern," Lentes
lion for bonuses.
said. "I have a court order I bave to
Due to heart problems, Crisp aid the 5beriff in enfordng."
bad 001 begiDI his jail term and bad
"I bave to support the judge,
remained in Boyd County , Ky .• protect the county from liability
except when called to court for and take concern of the health of
bealth updates.
Mr. Crisp. The sheriff and I. bave
"At this point, his guilt or inno- some vecy bard wm ahead to take
cence, or bow severe a sentence care of all these concerns," be saic:I.
was or was not. is beyond my con- "111e judge bas been understanding

Stamp price.going to 32 cents
WASHING10N (AP) - Way cents. The rate bas risen steadily
blll:k wben, a stamp cost 3 cents. since tbe post office became a
That's bow much the price is goins , semi-independent agency in 1970
up next year-:- and allies say yet . and Congress eliminated its tax
another inaease is probably only a subsidy. · ·
1
year or two away.
'
The governins board of tbe
Tbe independent Postal Rate Poslal Service is expected to meet
Commission on Wednesday within two weeks 10 set an effecendorsed the increase from 29 live date for the new rates. It could
cents to 32 cents for a stamp for a reject the commissioo'~ ruling and
first-class letter. The Poslal Service ask for reconsideration, but lbat I$
said it bopes the new 'rate can take unlikely, since the decision is dose
effect "as etny as possible in Jan- to the rates requested by the post
u.y."
office and the agency urgently
The Increase is estimated to cost needs increued.incame.
an exua 60 cents to 7S ceots per
Some critics bave contended
!DOOth for the typiCal bousdlold.
that lbe proposed inaeasc: was too
• Millions of unp,riced stamps small, particularly after four years
bearing die letter ' G" - for Old without a rate rise, and will lllC8!I
Olory- bave already been printed another increase will be needed in
and will be shipped to post offices one or two years.
aaoaa the country to be sold at the
William H. Quijm, president of
new rare.
the National Poslal Mall Handlers
: From the Great Depression to Unioo, told the rate commis$1oo the
tbe Eiaenbower era, the cost of .proposed increase is "wholly
malllna a flrlt-clasa letter was 3

insufficient to provide the Postal
Service with lbe revenues lbat will
be necessary to operate the Postal
Service liming the next few yean."
Tbe commission made some
changes in the post office' request,
tbougb, notably, rejeaing the plan
to increase the cost of all types of
· postage by the same pen:entage.
Instead, the commissioo booatcd
magazine, newspaper, advertising
and packaae rates by in&lt;n than the
Poslal Service had asked. It held
the increase for postcards to a
penny - balf tliat requested --and
rejected any boost In the rate for
additional weight in heavy first. class items.
Tbe Postal Service issued a
statement saying it was ''disappointed'' tbat lbe across-the-board
mcreases bad beco turned down,
but noted that the decision
'-'appears to be designed to meet
our revenue requirement"

up until now and the jud11e bas now ated. We're making it as cost-effec said the time bas come to fmisb iL" tive as possible."
Crisp•s attorney may agree to
lf1be waiver-oc:cun, one o1 th&amp;
not me any lawsuits against the jail six jails previously oontactcd likely
be is sent to if 'Crisp has health will take Crisp. Lcntes said.
problems, Lentes said.
If Crisp does not waive his right
"If Crisp gets in jail and lben the to ftle a lawsuit, Favreau said the
county !!CIS sued, the jail and lbe 63:year-o.ld must so to prison.
county could be baokrupted," be Crisp thea would be boosed in the
added. "He's going to be incaroer(Continued 011 hge 3)

Trade pact appears headed
for winning vote in Senate .

30
25

20
15

WASHING1DN (AP) - Under
a furious lobbying banage from the
Clintoo adminisllalioo and a smaii
army of coqiorate eotecutives, the
Senate appears ready to ratify a
sweeping expansion of global free
'trade in a climactic vote tonight
Senior administration officials
were guarding their vote counts
laiC Wednesday, but Treaslll)' Secretary Lloyd Bentsen .declared
''momentum is swinging our way"
and a smiling U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor assured
reporters, "We're in very good

~·House endorsed the accord,
negotiated under the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade,
by a 288-146 voteoo Tuesday.
Thirty-three otber countries
L..._ _ _ _ _ _ _..J already bave ratified lbe 124-llllioo
» accord and, accordins to Bentse~,

and the other countriea are poised

to act before Jan. ·I if the Senate
foUows the House.
·
For that to happen, 60 senators
must vote to override a parliamentary objection lodged by Sen.
Robert Byrd, D-W.Va According
to an Associated Press survey.
GA TI proponeots appeared to
bave acbieved that number, when
camling those who were leaning in
favor but not fimlly cornmiltred.
Presideot Clinton was boping to
widen the still-thin victory IDIII1in
at a breakfast meetin&amp; today Wtth
20 lawmaker$, including some of
the uncommitted and a late and
auclal supporter, Senate RepubliCIIll~ade£Bob Dole.
Opponeots' only bopc: was to
change enough senators minda to
muster 4 I votes In favar or the procedural hurdle imposed by Byrd.
1

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